WALTER S. SCHELL'S QUALITY SEEDS FOR MARKET-GARDENERS 
TOMATO 
HOW TO GROW TOMATOES. — Plan to grow an early crop and a main or general crop. For market or your own use, the 
idea of an early Tomato is to have it as early as passible. The early varieties are all small fruits compared with the main-crop 
sorts; so do not expect large early Tomatoes. It is well to grow several early and several late sorts if there is room enough. For 
early crop, sow the seed in February or March in greenhouse, hotbeds, or in boxes in the house for home-gardens. When plants 
are 2 inches high, transplant them indoorr. giving room between the plants as they are short and stalky. If they are too close, 
they get long and "spindly." Set the plants out as soon as soil is in co)idition and there is no danger of freezing. They may also be 
grown in pots in the house, then set out when in blossom. For main crop, start seed two to four weeks later, transplant, then set 
out. When it can be done, we advise supporting plants on stakes, racks, or tellises. They do better, are more easily cultivated, 
and continue to yield longer. Grow King-of-All as one of your main-crop varieties. One ounce will produce about 3,000 plants. 
My Tomato seed is saved from perfect-type fruits, and if your soil is right, the weather conditions 
at all favorable, and you give the growing plants the attention they deserve, you will obtain a crop of the 
most excellent fruits of any of the varieties I offer. It stands the severest test of the most critical market- 
gardeners. You will thoroughly agree with this if you sow my seed. 
SCHELL'S 
KING-OF-ALL TOMATO 
The Grandest of them all. Truly entitled 
to its name, for it outyields all others. 
It is perfect in shape, very large in size, 
and unexcelled in quality. 
King-of-All Tomato is a main-crop va- 
riety. Its wonderful yield is one of its 
greatest values, starting off as it does 
rather early in the season with the plants 
crowded full of clusters of the most beau- 
tiful big deep red Tomatoes, perfectly 
smooth right up to the stem, and it con- 
tinues to bear them until stopped by the 
grower or by frost. When put in baskets 
on the market, folks cannot resist them 
because of their beautiful, attractive ap- 
pearance. They are perfect. The illustra- 
tion is from an actual photograph of King- 
of-All, grown by one of my market-gar- 
dener customers, Mr. David Hepford, 
from the seed we ."iold him. Order it on 
my recommendation and I know you 
will be glad you did. Send your order 
early. Pkt. lOc, Vioz. 25c., Vioz. 
50e., oz. $1, Vilb. $3, "^Ib. $5, lb. $10. 
Mr. E. G. DvMO>n). extensive market- 
gardener, writes me: "If my patch had all 
been KIng-of-AII, I would have had ten 
thousand baskets. I never saw such nice, 
large, smooth Tomatoes in my life, not even 
at all the fairs I have been to. Thirty To- 
matoes often filled a 14-quart basket. I 
will have a thousand baskets yet if frost 
holds off two weeks." 
