2 WILL’S PIONEER SEEDHOUSE, GREENHOUSE AND NURSERY 
Ps 


ah 
3 
Culture. Sow in hotbed or shallow boxes in the house in early 
Spring, allowing 8 to 10 weeks from sowing indoors to setting in open e J Be 
ground; when plants are large enough, transplant into hotbed or boxes | Ss air 
and when all danger from frost is past transplant into open ground, 
about four feet apart each way. About 600 seeds to the packet. 




VICTOR 
Bronze Medal winner, All-America Se- 
lections for 1941. “A fine contribu- 
tion by Dr. A. F. Yeager to To- 
mato Progress. (See inside front . 
cover for colored illustration.) 
Brought out at the Michigan State 
College, this is a cross between All- 
red and Break O’Day. In Victor are 
combined the determinate or self 
pruning vine of Allred and Bison, 
the earliness and uniform color of 
Allred, and the smoothness of Break 
O’Day. The somewhat flattened fruits 
are a desirable red in color, very 
fleshy and resist cracking. Though 
Victor tends to, scant foliage, this 
characteristic is one that goes with 
earliness and sun damage is much 
less than might be expected. Mar- 
a ket quality is very high and-culls 
We find Will’s seeds the few. If you want earliness, high 
best for our short season at quality and heavy yield, try Victor. 
the head of lakes.—Mar- Pkt., 10c; % 0z., 30c; 0z., 50c; 14 
guerite Travis, Duluth, Ib., $1.65; 14 Ib., $3.00; 1 Ib $5.50, 
: . . ° 9 . 9 . + 
| Minn. Ke No.6, Breda: postpaid. a . 


Victor 

Millet’s Dakota 
MILLET'S DAKOTA. The har diest, most 
drouth resistant early 
Tomato. Originated by the late John W. Millet 
of Bismarck, and introduced by us in 1913, it 
is as early as the earliest strain of Earliana. 
The fruit is medium sized, smooth, and rich 
deep scarlet, of high quality. Under unfavor- 
able conditions we believe it will outyield other 
varieties and we have been surprised at its 
amazing performances under irrigation. Pkt., 
10c3 4 04, 25e3 oz, 45e3 % Ib., $1.40, postpaid. 
Wa 
Mandan Earliana 

. 
Strawberry or Groun rn MANDAN EARLIANAnDeveloped for drouth re- 
sistance, quality and yield 

on r ~ by the Bureau of Plant Industry, Division of Dry 
GROUND CHERRY, HUSK or STRAWBERRY TO- Land Agriculture, Northern Great Plains Field 
MATO, Not a true Tomato, the round yellow Station, Mandan, N. Dak. During dry weather 
this variety holds its fruit size and yield better 
fruits are half an inch in diameter, enclosed in than any other sort. Early, bright scarlet in 
thin paper-like husks. A heavy yielder, very color, and very meaty, we recommend this variety 
sweet, and used mostly for pies and preserves. for the Great Plains. Pkt., 10ce3; 4% 02, 35e3 02, 
Pkt., 10c; 1% 02, 25c3 0z., 45e, postpaid. SUC i ye, AD s1F2.00) postpaid’ 
JOHN BAER. Slightly earlier than Bonny Best, a> 
oy A heavy yielder of smooth, firm, medium sized, flat- 
Not a true Huckleberry, but belonging to the tened globe shaped, scarlet fruits. Pkt., 8e3 oz,,. 
ane SeTeAY, as do Pome tOos, Eggplant, and 35¢; %4 Ib., $1.00, postpaid. 
epper, 1S 18 very productive of round, nearl 
black fruits, but little smaller than a Conanedt Sieh esos all-purpose, midseason Tomato de- 
Grape. These fruits when fully ripe make ex- _. Yeloped by the U. S. Department of Agriculture, 
. . \ . 44 . a 
ee! z 4 ; 
& oe {a i ST - ' ~—_|e a bah ey >» + es 



