West's New 
FIRSTEARLY 
Tomato 
"The earliest, most prolific, best 
quality Extra -Early Tomato for 
garden or greenhouse culture." 
"BEATS THEM ALL" 
Says M. M. Miesse, Tomato- 
grower for forty years. He has 
tried all early varieties outside and 
under glass, and says West's 
Firstearly is best of all. 
ITS STERLING QUALITIES ABE 
Extra Earl> — Wonderfully Prolific — 
More Perfect Marketable Fruit — Rich 
Flavor — Beautiful Color — A ttractive 
Shape — Best for Greenhouse and Extra- 
Early Outside Crop. 
Grow this for your first-early crop, but 
not for the main or general crop. Grow 
King-of-All for the large-sized main crop. 
Prices: Pkt. 10 cts., Vioz. 75 cts., oz. 
$1.50, 2 ozs.$2.50, I41b.$4,y2lb. $7.50, 
lb. $15. 
READ WHAT THESE MARKET-GARDENERS THINK 
OF WEST'S NEW FIRSTEARLY. THEY ARE A FEW 
OF THE HUNDREDS WHO GREW IT LAST YEAR 
In answer to your inquiry I will say that the Firstearly 
Tomato proved to be very prolific, yielding abundantly, and 
the stalks were very large and strong. I will Rive Ihein another 
test next season. — L. M, Briggs, Prop,, Merchant's Greenhouse, 
Fargo, N. D,, Oct. i, 1917, 
' NOTE.- Wf have learned 
that a western seedsman 
named a new tomato introduced by 
him some years ago, Peerless; 
hence we have changed the name 
of West's, which is a distinctly dif- 
ferent Tomato, to West's Firstearly. 
I found it early, quality excellent, shape good; very few rough 
ones; size about right; average four to the pound; yield good. 
— Charles H. Moore, liinghamton, N. Y., Sept. 27, 191 7. 
The quality of your Firstearly Tomato is fine; as to shape il 
could not be better; as to yield it beat anything I ever saw. 
The vines were covered with Tomatoes. — J. M, Conn, Newark, 
Ohio. Sept. 29, 1917. 
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