▼ rt IT^rtTrt CULTURE.— Thc seed should be sown about V 2 inch deep during March or early April in a hotbed, greenhouse, or wint 

 !|J I of a room, where a night temperature- of not less than 60 degrees is kept. When the plants are about two inches high. I 



I W III ■■ I W should be set out three inches apart in boxes three inches deep, or potted into three-inch pots, allowing a single plant to a 

 They are sometimes shifted a second lime into larger pots, by which process the plants are rendered more sturdy and branching. About the middle of i 

 tn this latitude, the plants may he set in the open ground. 



885 EARLIANA 



This is still the best extra early Tomato for the 

 family garden, as it bears a very heavy crop quite 

 early in the season. It has excellent flavor and is 

 remarkably solid. 



Price, pkt., 10c; oz., SI. SO; % lb., $4.00. 



877 BONNY BEST 



Large Size Tomatoes Bright Scarlet in Color 



Bonny Best is decidedly the "best" in its class. 

 It is almost as early as Earliana; and is a larger 

 tomato, and a heavier cropper. The fruits are deep 

 scarlet in color, very smooth, perfectly round, solid 

 and meaty. Bonny Best is also an excellent variety 

 tor the canner, as it yields from 12 to 15 tons to the 

 acre. 



Price, pkt., 10c; oz., SI. 25; H lb.. $3,75. 



878 BREAK O' DAY 



A Solid Extra Early Variety — Disease Resistant 



It is a cross between Marglobe and another 

 variety not as yet introduced to commerce. It is 

 greatly disease-resistant and is the same shape, color 

 and size as Marglobe but much more solid; and to 

 crown all is 10 to 12 days earlier in ripening. This 

 means that Break O' Day will ripen along with 

 Bonny Best and the other extra early tomatoes, 

 but excels them in size, soliditv and seedlessness. 



Price, pkt., 10c; oz., $1.50; H lb., $4.00. 



916A Henderson's Variety Collection of 

 Tomatoes For The Home Garden 



The Fruit 



The Orange 



Winsall 

 Price, 1 pkt. each of 3 varieties, 60c. 



894 MARGLOBE 



Resists Rust and W 



-Almost round; of large size, and bright red color. 

 is one of the most productive tomatoes in cultivati 



Marglobe is early and continues bearing over a li 

 period of time. It possesses a delicious flavor, 

 attractive and immune to wilt. 



Price, pkt., 15c; oz., $1.00; X lb., $3.00. 



899 LARGE RED PEAR 



Plants vigorous, exceptionally productive, prodm 

 ripe fruits fairly early in the season, and contini 

 until frost. Fruits resemble a Bartlett pear in sh: 

 measuring 3 to 3H inches long, and average 2 im 

 in diameter at the .base. Solid bright scarlet in cc 

 The flesh is very firm, meaty, with few seeds and 

 from well defined seed- cavities. The quality and flj 

 are excellent, with a minimum of acidity. 



Pkt., 25c; 5 pkts., $1.00. 



905 PRITCHARD 



or SCARLET TOPP 



For its disease resistant qualities, it supersede I 

 others. The vines are very sturdy in growth — she 

 than the Marglobe — and they produce the hea- 

 crops of any of its class. 



Unlike other early varieties. Scarlet Topper conti )e 

 to bear long after the other sorts have ceased, 

 fruits are large, from 3 to 3}4 inches in diameter 

 perfectly globe shaped. 



Price, pkt., 10c; oz., $1.25; 14 lb.. S3.50. 



906 STONE 



One of the popular main crop varieties. The pla i 

 a strong grower, is very prolific and produces a en |o 

 large, smooth fruits almost round in shape, very 

 and slightly flattened at base and top. 



Price, pkt., 10c; oz., $1.25; }4 lb.. $3.50. 



BONNY BEST 



LARGE RED PEAR 



Henderson's Leaflet, "Tomatoes, How to Grow Them" gives the latest and most advanced methods for the productic 

 fancy fruit in your own garden. Sent gratis on request with orders. 



44 



