WALXe^ S. SCHELL'S QUALITY SEEDS FOR MARKET- GARDENERS 
PEPPERS (Mangoes^ 
HOW TO GROW PEPPERS.-Start the seed in hotbeds, 
greenhouse, or in boxes indoors in March or April. When tha 
plants are about 2 inches high, transplant in other boxes, setting 
them 2 inches apart. Then, when the weather is settled, the 
sou warm, and all danger of freezing over, set the pUnts out, 
after first preparing the soil well, working in well-rotted 
manure or some good fertilizer. For the home-garden set 
plants a foot apart in the rows and have rows a foot apart 
For large plantings make rows 2 feet apart. Do not grow 
sharp and sweet Peppers together; they will mil. One 
ounce wiU produce 1,000 plants. 
•V 
SchelVs Quality Pepper 
Schell's Quality 
Pepper 
It continues to 
hold first place as 
the most prolific, 
and earliest to 
ripen of all Pep- 
pers. Every mar- 
ket having a trade 
on mangoesshould 
grow it. 
quick to color. No other variety can claim all these qualities. 
The Chinese Giant is very large, but lacks the big yield; so with 
other varieties, they lack one or more of the four essential qualities 
which the new Quality Pepper possesses, and w-hich make it without 
question the most valuable Pepper or Mango in cultivation. The 
market-gardeners who grow it are amazed at the remarkable crop 
it produces for them and the best testimonial is the fact that these 
same gardeners have continued to order it everv year. Pkt. 15 cts., 
oz. $1.25, >^Ib. $4, lb. $15. 
"Enclosed find (Js for one peck 
of Yellow Bountiful Beans. Your 
Peppers and all other seed came 
up splendidly and are doing 
well." — B. SULZER, Ohio, 
ECT EEPPS^R FOR THE MARKET-GARDENER 
T good. \ It will outcrop any one I've ever raised."— 
!». K. LeiBtTTlie Leick Farm^lio. 
A b^tiful, attractiTO^haJe, which makes it sell on sight, while its 
SM^oi quality sweeL^s an Ipple, backs up its attractive appearance, 
most prc^ificI^BpergS'er grown in this locality. The photograph 
38 perfect fruits on it. They do not all 
this gives you an idea of the tremendous 
the/most prdjific 
ows a specimen plant- \vi 
yield tits large liimber, 
yieldingVpossibiliflies of 
this new Qhjality Peppi 
A beautifuSs(srletj^en 
ripe, it has all ine' quali 
ties required for the most 
profitable crop, namely, 
size, yield, quality. 
Improved Ruby King (see page 29) 
Chinese Giant, 
perfect Peppers. 
down from my .seed. High (iiialit>' seeds produce just such 
28 
"I have sold hundreds of dollars' 
worth of Quality Peppers long before the 
fruits started to form on other varieties. 
After we had pulled Pepiiers tliree or 
four times, your Quality Pepper plants 
still bore 10 to 1 more fruits tlian any of 
the other varieties from wliich we liad 
not yet had one picking," — G, P, 
Bl.ANCU.AKI). 
Chinese Giant. i9''gestPep- 
- per m cuUiva- 
tiim, averagiiTfl,^ to I.S inches in cir- 
cumferencg»^ It yields abundantly 
but it is'not so prolific as my new 
Qii^Jjfy Pepper. The flesh is thick, 
fy tender and sweet and, being so 
large, makes an excellent Mango for 
stuffing. The color is a brilliant scar- 
let when ripe. The photograph shows 
you wliat a splendid variety this is. 
You should grow "Chinese Giant." 
Pkt. lOc, oz. 76c., V4lb. $3, lb. $10. 
