22 SQUARE DEAL NURSERY 
PRICE LIST OF THE BEST EVERBEARING KINDS 
25 50 8) 
PROLTESSIVE: We Svea ne SN GS Sal OO) 
SUPER De aie whe whsceytmaueee ee Dl Obe mio 1.00 
AMETICUS'{s acy cote coo Bey erence 1.00 
TANCISS ee oee ante eter ere ADO pemetteny 1.00 
1ZAOOHKMDK AE 5 GA pomodoago ook ays 1.00 
AIA VATICE)2 Fe EWa ie eke AEE en nO one 
Forward). Sines <i son erine citer ame ! 
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When wanted by parcel post prepaid add one-quarter of a cent to each plant. 
larger lots ask for special prices. 
When Writing Please Sign Your Name, and 
give your Post Office and State plainly. I re- 
ceive thousands of letters every year with no 
address whatever, and sometimes with no 
name at all. 
I am now holding a letter that contained 
money, saying ship a certain amount of plants 
at once, the order written on a small strip of 
paper with no name or address. I suppose 
that party that sent me the letter thinks that 
I stole his money, but it is no fault of mine. I 
would have gladly sent the plants, or will re- 
turn his money now if he will send me his 
name and address. 
We nurserymen have a great deal of pleas- 
ure in filling your orders. Sometimes I think 
it the nicest business on earth, receiving nice 
orders, enclosing the cash, along with it comes 
a nice letter speaking good things about us— 
everything running as smooth as clockwork. 
Getting about all the orders we can fill, and 
filling them just the very best we can possi- 
bly do it. Trying our very best to do better 
than we did the other time that we pleased 
you so much. 
About this time we begin to think that we 
are about the best Nursery on earth, and 
have the best lot of customers on earth. And 
we are almost carried off our feet. 
But here the tide changes. We have a 
week of cold, rainy weather, not fit for man 
or beast to be out of the shelter. Orders con- 
tinue to pour in, the harder it rains the faster 
they come, not only by mail, but the wires are 
kept busy. Telephones are constantly ring- 
ing, messenger boys at the door every five 
minutes delivering rush orders. Every order 
reads Rush! Rush!—ship at once or return 
my money. 
This is the week, if we ever made a mistake 
in our lives, that the customer comes back 
WHEN WRITING PLEASE SIGN YOUR NAME. 
100 200 300 400 500 1,000 
$1.25 $2.00 $8.00 $4.00 $4.50 $8.00 
1.25 2.00 3.00 4.00 4.50 8.00 
1.25 2.00 3.00 4.00 4.50 8.00 
1.25 2.00 3.00 4.00 
1.25 
$1.00 for 25; $2.50 for 100. Stock limited. 
For 
cross and tells us how mean he thinks we 
are. One fellow has a kick that his plants 
arrived on Saturday and he had to hold them 
over until Monday, and that he knows that 
he will lose every plant and that it is all our 
fault. 
Another one received an extra bundle that 
he did not order and wants to know what to 
do with it. Some shipping clerk made a blun- 
der and shipped out the wrong box to the 
wrong man—he has something he never 
heard tell of before. He is standing up on the 
box and the box on the end. He is too mad 
with us to write plain, so we have to guess 
what he says about us. It takes just three 
weeks of good working weather to get on the 
level again. And, oh, how good we feel when 
the clerk calls out once more the last order 
is filled. 
Everybody we meet begins to look better 
and sweeter and the sun shines again. But 
we thank you, one and all, just the sevne, and 
want you to understand while you are worry- 
ing about your order being filled quickly, we 
are worrying just as much as you are and do- 
ing everything in our power to get it to you 
just as soon as possible. 
One thing you can help us out in and that 
is, please do not put off ordering until the 
last minute; give us all the time you possibly 
can. If we could have every order a month 
in advance of the time it must be shipped, 
we would seldom fail to have it to you on 
time. Won’t you do this for us this season? 
I have insisted on this point for several years 
and am proud to say that the large majority 
of my old customers are sending theirs as 
early as possible. Please note on page No.— 
that on every order received before March 1st 
the purchaser is allowed to select 25c. worth 
of plants free—besides the regular discounts. 
; Henry County, Ky., May 1, 1915. 
Mr. E. W. Townsend. 
Dear Sir—I set the strawberry plants re- 
ceived from you six weeks ago, and they are 
doing fine, notwithstanding the worst droughc 
in my ten years’ experience with strawberries. 
I never saw better developed plants than you 
send out. I thank you for good count and 
prompt attention to my order. 
W. I. KELLY, 
Hillsboro County, Fla., April 13, 1915. 
Mr. Townsend. 
Dear Sir—Plants received all right today; 
thanks for fine plants. Vo JSE, VIS ONLI O) Wess. 
Buchannan County, Mo., April 15, 1915. 
E. W. Townsend. 
Dear Sir—I received the strawberry plants 
in good shape and thank you for your prompt 
attention. Yours for success, 
HENRY DITTMORE. 
