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Big Money in Strawberries 



We Teach You 

 How to Grow Them 



Do you know, dear reader, that raising strawberries for 

 market is an exceedingly profitable business: Well, it is, 

 if you know how to do it right. And it is not only a big 

 money maker, but is a very pleasant and healthful pursuit as well, 

 as many of our pupils can testify. 



But you must thoroughly understand how to go about it. 

 ^'ou can't succeed in getting all there is in it of health, 

 enjoyment and good hard dollars without proper training. 



And to get that practical training and preparation that will 

 make • uccess absolutely certain, you must put yourself in touch 

 with those who are equipped by experience to help you. 

 Isn"t that true.' 



'T'HE Kellogg Corresponden'ce School of Strawberry 



Culture teaches you the way and tells you how to a;ro\v 

 big crops of fancy berries and how to pick and pack them for 

 top prices. 



We show you how to get more select berries from one acre 

 than two will produce of the "other kind" 

 under the old heads. 



We make every detail of the work 

 plain and tell you just when and how to 

 do everything to get the very best results. 



We show you how to lower the 



Whml We Did for One Pupil 



East Jalfrey, N. H., Nov. B, 'O.'i. 

 R. M. Kellogg Co. 



In the spring of li)04 I ordered 1,000 of your Tlior- 

 ouslibred Pedigree Plants, set them on one-eighth aere of 

 good soil and liandled tliem aeeordingto vour instmrtions, 

 ] pieked ijff the buds the first y. iir and wfiut do you tliink I 

 got in return? I pieked and sol'i !I00 qiiiirts of niee, ).ig 

 ripe berries, sold them for l."> to IS eenls p<-r quart, iiiuk 



wide and open one. No grower is too large and none too small to 

 be benefited by our teachings. 



The better you understand your business the more money 

 you can make and with less work. 



Now, if you want to know all about our methods, send us 

 your name and address and $1.00, and 

 you will be enrolled as a full member of 

 the great Correspondence School. 



And "The Strawberry", our inter- 

 estingand valuable publication, n-ill come 

 to you each month full of instruction and 



Yotlrs tmlv 



ISRAEL VALW.W. ,,_, „ 



1 he strawberry will contain no 



puzzles, no visionary stories, no imaginary theories; nothing but 



strictly business instruction, common sense and actual experience 



from the world's greatest eNperts. It is the only journal in the 



world devoted evclusively to the interests of strawberry producers 



expense of production and increase vour '"'•'? "i' *^i'';,-„*''i'' ''* '"/' 5''"'' h^9° ?'"."'* '^■'.V'Z!""- tell you just what to do in your strawberry 

 ^ ' -I pieked and hlled standard quart baskets with fifteen ■' ' ^ " ly ,, 



receipts. berries and ean funii.sh proof if anyone doubts my word, field at that particular time, and will keep 



. . I shall want 10.000 of yonr Pedigree plants for ne.\t . . . ^ 



We explain in a practical way how spring; can l get them i Yourstmlv. you from making expensive mistakes. 



large families ivith small gardens can grow 



an abundance of choice berries for home use and make money , too. 



We prepare the young man for a good paying position. 



There is a great call for foremen on berry farms. The 

 demand is far in excess of the .supply. We fit you for that work. 



Our course of instruction trains the young woman for an idea 

 out-of-door occupation in which she can make much more thai 

 an independent living. 



The first person to join this school was a young woman ul.o 

 has won splendid success as a strawberry culturist in Minnesota. 



And among our hundreds of pupils are many women who 

 are enthusiasts in the business. 



Miss S. M. Pollard, of Woodside, Minn., sends us a clip- 

 ping from a local newspaper and says that it was through our 

 instruction that her success as referred to therein was made. 

 She says that the 1905 crop was her first attempt at raising straw 

 berries, yet from about eight rods of plants, she had sold on July 

 l''th, 400 quarts and had about 300 more to gather. 



The newspaper clipping follows: 



* * "The largest and nicest strawbeiries we have had the pleasure of 



seeing this year were bronijht to our office by Miss S. M. Pollard, of 

 Woodside. 'The size of the berries is phenomenal, some of them 

 measuring five and one-half inches in circumference, while the flavor 

 is sweeter and it is more juicy than the western and southern berrj-. ' ' 



No Other out-of-door employment offers larger opportunity 



to the enterprising than does strawberrj' culture, and the field is a 



Don't delay, but write us today. Address 



R. M. Kellogg Publishing Company, iisponageAve., Three Rivers, Mich. 



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