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THREE RIVERS, MICHIGAN, W \ 





Books 



strawberries at the Kellogg Farm. 



That little advertisement iu Monday 

 night's Hastier relating to strawber- 

 ied at the Kellogg Farm did the tusi- 

 ness, and Tuesday morning tiie scene 

 p;e ented in the bia srawberry fields 

 at tiie farm was a beautiful and in- 

 spiriui; one. Men, women and child- 

 ren flocked thither with baskets, pails 

 and pan.^ to gather the superbly splen- 

 did fruit that is an ever new surprise 

 and delight tO the people of this sec- 

 tion, for nowhere else in the world are 

 finer and larger berries grown ihan 

 right in Three Rivers and on toe 

 farms made famous by its fonnder, the 

 late R M. Kellogg, and whose splen- 

 did reputation shows no evidence of 

 diiuinuation under the skillful man- 

 agement of his snccessors. 



This great institution has done a 

 larger business this season than in any 

 previous year of its history, and, as 

 the visitors to the fields today looked 

 out Upon the long row of noble plants 

 laden with immense red berries, the 

 steady advance of this grt"»t inst-tu- 

 tion and its increasing popular favor 

 in all sections of the country appeared 

 not at all strange. As one visitor ex- 

 claimed : ''If anybody ever bad a 

 doubt of the superior quality cf Kel- 

 logg'e plants and Kellogg's way of 

 growing berries such a sight as this 

 ought to dispel that doubt. It is the 

 greatest strawberry sight, so far as 

 real quality goes, that I have ever 

 seen. " 



When one can pick a quatt of berries 

 without moving from his place be- 

 tween the rows, and do the work in 

 less than two minutes, it certainly in- 

 dicates the abundance in which the 

 berries are produced. We don t know 

 how many ijuarts were gathercq from 

 one patch of Dornanj yesterday, but if 

 it ran into thousands it would not ex- 

 ceed our own estimate, bused upon 

 what we saw there. If you haven't 

 baen out to the farm this season, you 

 should not fail to do so at once, as the 

 plants will soon be plowed under to 

 make room for a crop of Canadian fiekl 

 peas, one of the legumes eiu'idoycd by 

 the Kellogg management to restore 

 feitiliy to the soil and thus maintain 

 the fine ((iiality and famous staujiua 

 of the strawbeny plants. Nobody 

 should tail to get some of the mam- 

 moth fellows, as delicious and swfct as 

 they are big, before the opportunity 

 has vanished. 



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SWAR 



Lot 1, 

 16, 17, 2 

 BROOK 1 



Lots 1, 

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 28, 34, 3" 

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