1935 -SJLW • SALZER’S * SEEDS- 69 
Salzer’s Earliest of All Tomato 
Although introduced by us many years ago, Salzer’s Earliest of All is still the leading extra 
early tomato, the earliest large-sized variety grown, and we believe, as we are constantly improv¬ 
ing it, it will hold its position and will stay on top as the Earliest of All. 
With us in the North it has always been a study to produce extremely early vegetables, such as will ripen 
and produce perfect fruit in a short time, and in Earliest of All our efforts have been successful. Everybody 
who has tried it, speaks of it in highest praise. Earliness in tomatoes is essential for the market grower 
and highly desirable for the home garden. Salzer’s Earliest of All is the best extra-early so far produced; 
it is our very earliest strain; it is a “short season” tomato. Ripening 1 as it does in about 108 days, in the North, it is 
especially well adapted to all sections of the country, which makes it so decidedly popular. Finely bred for uniformity 
in size, attractiveness, extra earliness, and trueness to type, Salzer Quality is nowhere better evidenced than in this 
fine, highly praised variety. If you want the very earliest tomatoes, combined with fine flavor, meatiness, productive¬ 
ness, attractiveness, and tenderness, you should plant our Earliest of All. It is bound to please the most particular. 
The fruits are of good size, brilliant scarlet color, nearly round, entirely smooth, and remarkably handsome. The 
flesh is solid, and of the finest flavor. The fruits are borne continuously in large numbers until killed by frost. They 
have a tough skin, firm flesh, making them good shippers and keepers. Mrs. Wm. Plenty, Box 54, Littleton, Ill., writes, 
“My Earliest of All Tomatoes were wonderful. We had ripe tomatoes 3 weeks before our neighbors.” Mr. J. O. Han¬ 
son, Box 212, Plymouth, Iowa, writes, “Your Earliest of All Tomatoes were surely early and of exceptionally fine flavor.” 
Mr, Emil Kucera, R. D. 4, Box 35, Colome, So. Dak., writes, “I raised ICO bushels Earliest of All Tomatoes from *4 acre, 
which sold at $1 per bushel.” 
1118—Price of Salzer’s Earliest of All: Pkg., 15c; Vz oz., 35c; oz., OOc; 2 oz., $1.00; lb., $1.75; lb., $0.25, 
postpaid. 
Salzer’s Earliest of All Tomatoes are wonderful. I have the best luck with your tomato seed, growing good sized, extra 
early tomatoes.-Mr. Otto Lumatainen, R. F. D., Eovey, Minnesota. 
