THREE HEAVY PRODUCING 

 LATE STRAWBERRIES 



They Make Friends and Keep Them 



TOWNSEND BIG LATE 



A Townsend introduction. Introduced by us, Spring, 

 1911. BIG LATE has been grown in every section 

 where strawberries are grown, and it has proven itself 

 a great money maker for the average grower. I have 

 never tasted a better berry. It is surely the aristocrat 

 of the standard varieties for quality. Plants are strong, 

 erect, and hold the berries off the ground like cherries. 

 No garden is complete without this grand variety. 

 Fruit, medium to large, bright velvet red, and every 

 berry looks like it has been varnished. Very few va- 

 rieties equal it in production. 



LUPTON 



(late) Originated in New Jersey and 

 widely grown in that state where it 

 seems to be at its best. Lupton is a large, fancy berry, 

 and an excellent shipper, moderately productive, on 

 account of its large size and beautiful color, always 

 brings good prices, and quality is ordinary. Makes a 

 fine row of strong, healthy plants resembling the 

 Chesapeake, and will often do better on ordinary high 

 soil than the Chesapeake. 



E^R ^ Ford is a Townsend production, and one 

 ■ wIVI^ of which we are proud. Ford, like Premier, 

 is frost resistant, and has made hundreds of our cus- 

 tomers big money when other late varieties were killed. 

 A strong, hardy plant grower on all soils. Fruit, very 

 large, firm and of good quality; ranks with the very 

 best in production. Ford will make too many plants 

 if not restricted, and for this reason should be set 

 wide in the rows and grown in narrow matted rows 

 or in hills. We have never seen a rust blemish on any 

 Ford plant in ten years growing it, and never heard of 

 a crop failure. Plant Ford and you will not go astray. 



DEAR SIRS:— Alto Pass, 111., May 24th, 32. 



Thought I should write and tell you that the 700 Blakemore Plants 



bought from you this Spring were surely the best plants I ever saw. 



I have a really good stand and growing fine. B. LOUIS BOREN. 



400 Quarts From 1000 Aberdeen At One Picking 



York, Pa., August the 12th, 32 

 GENTLEMEN:— 



We were well pleased with the Aberdeen plants received from you. 

 We picked in one dav's picking over 400 quarts from one thousand 

 plants. C. E. WOOD. 



Special Offer Varieties 

 on This Page 



50 Plants each variety, 150 plants ^1' 25 

 I00plantseachvariety,300plants^2' 20 



LUPTON 



ASEAL MONET AAAKER 





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