ee 
San Marzano Tomato 
See how they yield! Never saw anything like it—every plant 
just covered with Tomatoes. Yields up to 10 to 15 tons per acre. 
The plants are compact and vigorous and bear the fruits in 
clusters in great numbers; they are shaped as shown in the 
photo, like a long plum, 3 44 inches long and 1 % inches ir diam- 
eter. The color is an intense crimson-red. They have a mild 
but very delicious flavor; very meaty, free from juicy pulp, few 
seeds and are a treat to pick up in your fingers and eat as they 
are, or with salt. An attractive dish when served whole or 
cut in halves or in their tiny slices. Used also extensively for 
canning whole, for puree, and for Tomato paste. The ripe 
fruits hold their fine quality and flavor a long time both on the 
vine and in storage. Be very sure to grow San Marzano 
in your home-garden and you vegetable growers for market. 
Be in the lead with something new. Pkt. 15 cts.; 2 pkts. 
25 cts.; oz. 85 cts.; oz. $1.50; 14lb. $4.50; Ib. $15. 
New Bean, Wade 
Awarded Gold Medal in 1952. 65 days. Pods round, smooth, 
stringless, 6 inches long, dark green. Fine freezer. Resistant 
to disease. Pods are borne profusely well above the ground. 
Pkt. (2 ozs.) 20 cts.; lb. 45 cts.; Ib. 85 cts.; 2 Ibs. $1.50; 
6 Ibs. $3.75; 10 Ibs. $6.75; 25 Ibs. $16.25; 100 lbs. $50. 
Hand-pollinating the blossoms of Keystate in the Foundation 
Tomato Nursery, Pennsylvania State College. 
New Keystate Hybrid Tomato 
A first-generation hybrid, every seed coming from a hand- 
pollinated fruit. Developed by Dr. R. E. Larson at Pennsyl- 
vania: Agricultural Experiment Station, from a cross between 
Rutgers and Pritchard. It sets fruit 10 days earlier than 
Rutgers and yields much heavier than either parent, by 3.tons 
more per acre. Globular fruits with thick flesh, averaging 514 
ounces, and they have an excellent color. Heavy. foliage. pro- 
tects from sunburn. Pkt. of 200 seeds $1; pkt. of 500 seeds 
$2; woz. $45 I4oz. $8; Woz. $15; oz..(8000 seeds) $30; 
Alb. $80; 14lb. $150; lb. $275. 
Schell’s Firstin Earliest White 
Positively first in 
Sweet Corn the market 
To the best of our knowledge this is the earliest white 
Sweet Corn of all varieties, ready to use in 55 to 60 days from 
date of planting seed. And it is a very sweet, delicious Corn. 
The ears are small, 614 to 7 inches long (all early Corns are 
smaller), and have 12 rows of broad, snowy white kernels. 
Stalks grow 5 feet high. A most desirable variety. Pkt. 
15 cts.; lb. 35 cts.; Ib. 65 cts.; 2 lbs. $1.25; 5 Ibs. $2.50; 
10 Ibs. $4.50; 15 Ibs. $6; 25 lbs. $9.50; 50 Ibs. $16; 100 Ibs. 
$82, prepaid. 
