
Tomatoes Contain All Vitamins 

TO M ATOES M.-S. SURE-CROPPING 
Tomato Seed sent postpaid 
One ounce of seed will produce 1500 plants; 44 pound for transplanting an acre 
CuxttureE. The seed should be sown in a hotbed about the first 
week in March or latter part of February, in 
and \% inch deep. When the plants are about 2 inches high they 
should be set into small pots, allowing a single plant to a pot. About 
the first of May the plants may be set out in the open ground in 
hills 3 to 4 feet apart each way. (Sufficient plants for a small garden 
may be started by sowing a few seeds in a shallow box or flower-pot 
and placing it in a sunny window of the room or kitchen.) Cultivate 
thoroughly as long as the vines will permit, but 
workings of the soil should be very shallow (surface cultivation) or 
the crop may be badly injured, especially if the 
near the young plants. 
From 90 to 120 days. 

STOKESDALE TOMATOES 
Bred for purity, quality, productiveness 
STOKESDALE. Second early. 
$5.00. 
MASTER MARGLOBE. Strain 6. Large and productive. A 
; oz. 40 cts.; 4 Ib. sealed $1.50; Ib. $5.00. 
Extra solid. Extra large. A Stokes intro- 
duction, now in its eighth generation of single-plant selection. 
grand stock. Pkt. 10 cts. 
VALIANT. Extra early. 
Pkt. 15c; oz. 50c; M4Ib. $1.75; Ib. $6.00. 

Early Varieties 
Earliana. Particularly desirable for ship- 
ping and for earliest market. The fruits 
are smooth, round, and of fine color. 
M.-S. EARLY WONDER. This is the 
fourteenth year that we are offering this 
wonderful extra-early Tomato, after 
several years of careful selection. The 
fruits are large for so early a variety, round 
or slightly flattened, deep  scarlet-red, 
smooth, free from cracks, and of fine 
quality. It produces ripe fruit as early as 
Earliana.and continues to yield marketable 
fruit for a longer period than the other 
first-early varieties. Vines vigorous and 
productive. 
Pritchard or Scarlet Topper. Very promis- 
ing, heavily productive, wilt-resistant in- 
troduction of superior merit for home and 
market garden, shipping and canning. 
Fruits large, globe-shaped, scarlet and well 
colored about the stem end; flesh firm and 
of fine quality. 75 days. 

Second-Early Varieties 
Break o’Day. One of its parents is Marglobe 
which it resembles in color, shape, size, 
and solidity, but it ts 10 to 12 days earlier. 
TOMATOES, EARLY VARIETIES 
Mi-9..barlys Wonders.) eee i ee 
Earlianay3 i ke ee ee 
TOMATOES, SECOND-EARLY VARIETIES 
Break: oi) Daya a ee eee eee 
Bonny: Best=.;.7px ce so eee eee 
June! PinkA ei oe ce ar ae ee 
TOMATOES, MAIN-CROP 
Marglobei( Certified) emer a 
New: Stones ose ara See ee ee 
Rutgers (Certified) 7)... ees sn ts 
Ponderosans eee co lee 
Brown) Special #2. ea see re se ee 
Oxheart seo Peet ee Te ote ne 
TOMATOES, PRESERVING VARIETIES 
Golden’ Queen Sore eae See eee 
Yellow Pear-shaped..................... 
Yellow Flum-shaped>.) sees ee 
Red Peart@.i) ge avs eee es cee 
Huski(Straw berry) a ee ee 
Red Cherry a4c0 a Sees a tne ote 
Vegetable Seeds 
Large. Productive. Its producing 
power will amaze you. Pkt. 10c; oz. 40c; 4b. sealed $1.50; [b. 
drills 5 inches apart 
the Iast two or three 
cultivator is run too 
M.-S. Rutgers 
Bonny Best. A most profitable variety for 
early and main crop. 
June Pink. (True Strain.) For gardeners 
who have a market for a nearly purplish 
pink fruit, which is produced in clusters. 
Main-Crop Varieties 
Beefsteak. Resembles Ponderosa in many 
ways, except that the fruits are a rich 
scarlet-red color. 
Greater Baltimore. (Regular Stock.) 
Indiana Greater Baltimore. An improved 
strain of Greater Baltimore. Fruits flat 
but thick, deep scarlet, medium large, solid 
and firm. Wilt-resistant. 83 days from 
setting plants to marketable fruit. 
M.-S. RUTGERS (Certified). This un- 
usual Tomato is from the New Jersey 
Agricultural Experiment Station. It is 
globe-shaped, quite large, with flesh firm, 
red, and very solid. Ripening begins at the 
center, Insuring good color throughout. 
Fills all requirements. 
Brown Special. Like Indiana Greater Bal- 
timore. 
hoz. YAlb. 
sone tote $0" 10 $0 20 $0 30 $1 00 $3 35 
10 30 OOM SE 25 
dates 10 20 30 i 00 3 25 
ear 10 20 30s OO morc 
Fe atk 10 25 1592 50 
p eectans 10 40 ele 25 eon io 
Reon 10 30) 15003225 
res 10 20 COM zEZo 
Yogto’ 10 20 GOR ZacD 
Listes 10 SOR l= 00a a25 
Astin: 10 40 150 5 00 
Lyne 15 35 55 
Sane 10 30 903200 
Raters 10 30 90 3 00 
: 10 25 40 150 500 
soe te 10 25 40 150 
: ee 10 25 40 1 50 
asta te 10 25 40 1 50 
con: 10 25 40 
hoi hie 10 25 40 
racic 10 30 50 
Sorc 10 30 50 
36 






Marglobe. (Certified.) Vigorous plants bear 
a wonderful crop of uniformly globe- 
shaped, large deep scarlet fruits. The flesh 
is bright red, solid, meaty and juicy. 
New Stone. So well known that it needs"no 
description. 
Oxheart. The largest Tomato ever intro- 
duced; fruits weigh up to 14% pounds. 
Skim is purplish scarlet, smooth and evenly 
colored. This shape is most distinct. Ex- 
tremely solid and have few seed cells. ; 
Ponderosa. Large, solid purple Tomato, 
fairly smooth and very good quality. Quite 
free from acid. 
TOMATO PLANTS. See page 37. 
Preserving Varieties 
Golden Queen. Yellow; large and solid. 
Husk or Strawberry. 
Peach. Very small, pink fruit with slight 
peach bloom on skin, 
Red Cherry. Small; grows in clusters. These 
are recommended and largely used for 
Tomato cocktail, served in ice, whole with 
toothpick inserted. 
Red Pear. Pear-shaped red. 
Yellow Pear-shaped. 
Yellow Plum-shaped. 
Glick’s Famous Tomato Seed 
Glick’s Seeds are grown on Glick’s 
Farms, where disease is unknown, and 
entirely isolated from any commercial 
Tomato-growing section. It is supervised 
on a strictly quality basis for planters of 
the better class, whose success is depen- 
dent on the very best seed that can be 
produced. 
GLICK’S IMPROVED MARGLOBE. 
(Pennsylvania Certified.) Red-oxide 
treated. Pkt. 15c; oz. 40c; Ib. $1.35; 
<'e6 $2.50. 1-Ib. sealed canisters, 
GLICK’S RUTGERS. 
Certified.) 
15c; oz. 50c; Ib. $1.75. 
canisters, $6.00. 
(Pennsylvania 
Red-oxide treated. Pkt. 
1-Ib. sealed 

LHEPMEVERRS EE DIAGOR 
