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Cbe Earge$t, most Solid, Ittost Productive, Best Quality* 
The few words above describe this great tomato. Others claim wonderful prop¬ 
erties, oiler prizes to induce big reports, but the Logan’s Giant comes out victorious 
every time. If you think you have tried the largest Tomato, try this one now, and 
you will see that you did not have the largest ana best heretofore. It is not only a 
comparatively new variety, but we claim for it in point of productiveness, size of 
“hit, exquisite quality and flavor, as well as early ripening, the best tomato extant. 
They grow to weigh over three pounds each, and attain the enormous circumfer¬ 
ence of twenty-one inches. This tomato is not, like many others, one-third seeds and 
water. They are a great, solid hall of tender, delicious meat, with very few seeds. 
They have frequently sold at ten cents each in competition with other kinds at fifty 
cents per bushel. 
If the vines are trained on a support, they will grow ten feet high, and be loaded 
with the finest fruit you ever placed your eyes on. Price, 10c. pkt.; 3 pkts. for 
25c. 
Read the following Reports $ 
We never saw their equal for prolific bearing and 
size. It is a marvelous sight.—P enn a. Farmer. 
The earliest, the largest, the best yielder, the most 
delicious tomato I ever ate.— Kennedy Cole, Pa. 
I picked sixteen pounds of Giant tomatoes at one 
picking from one vine.— Samuel Johnson, Pa. 
Two Giants weighed thirty-six ounces each. They 
are truly wonderful. The Giant tomato grew very 
tall and fruited very large and prolific, hence, 
imagine my surprise to find them so solid, sweet, 
and delicious. The finest I ever ate.—M rs. J. C. 
Harris, Pa. 
published monthly by the Wilmer Atkinson Co., of Philadelphia, is in my 
VrUv J (Hill Jvlll lldl* estimation, all things considered, the best paper ever published for the' farmer 
and his family. It contains from 32 to 48pages every month, and the contents are not spun-out articles, made 
up with the intention of filling the paper, but everything is “ boiled down,” and one may find more good 
common sense in one of its columns than is sometimes found in a whole issue of some farm papers. I have 
often wondered after reading one issue if there was anything left for the editors to tell the next month, but 
imagine my surprise in opening the next issue to find even more in the succeeding one. The editor will not 
receive or publish advertisements from swindlers, and the reader is perfectly safe in buying anything which 
they see advertised in the Journal, and this is more than I can say for most farm papers. I have made 
arrangements to send out some coupons for the publishers and I would like to have every one of my 
customers return this coupon (with the small price) direct to the publishers (not to me), and if after reading 
the first issue they are not perfectly satisfied I will return them their money out of my own pocket, and 
I know I am perfectly safe in making this offer as I never knew a sensible person to be dissatisfied with the 
Farm Journal.— Frank Finch. ^ 
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