TRL'E-TO-NAME SMALL FRUIT PLANTS 21 



NUMBER OF PLANTS REQUIRED TO SET AN ACRE 

 AT A GIVEN DISTANCE APART. 



Rows 24 inches apart plants 12 inch in row 20,000 



Rows 30 inches apart plants 12 inch in row 17,000 



Rows 36 inches apart plants 12 inch in row 14,000 



Rows 42 inches apart plants 12 inch in row 12,000 



Rows 36 inches apart plants 18 inch in row 9,500 



Rows 42 inches apart plants 18 inch in row 8,000 



Rows 48 inches apart plants 18 inch in row 7,000 



Rows 48 inches apart plants 24 inch in row 6,000 



Rows 48 inches apart plants 18 inch in row 5,000 



Rows 24 inches apart plants 24 inch in row 11,000 



Rows 30 inches apart plants 30 inch in row 7,000 



For hill culture rows should be either 24 inches, or 30 inches or 

 36 inches and plants set 12i nch in the row. 



For matted row system rows should be either 42 inches or 48 

 inches and plants set 18 inch to 24 inch in row. 



PARCEL POST RATES ON STRAWBERRY PLANTS 



Zone 1 and 2 — Figure 8c per 100 plants. 



Zone 3 — Figure 10c per 100 plants. 



Zone 4 — Figure 15c per 100 plants. 



Zone 5 — Figure 20c per 100 plants. 



Zone 6 — Figure 25c per 100 plants. 



Zone 7 — Figure 30c per 100 plants. 



Zone 8 — Figure 35c per 100 plants. 



This table has been very carefully prepared and after filling 

 hundreds of thousands of orders, and we believe it to be as correct 

 as it is possible to get it. Plants do not all weigh the same when 

 packed for shipment and no table could prove correct. We do not 

 try to adjust small differences in postage. This rate will apply to 

 all orders received to go by parcel post prepaid, and when not 

 sufficient postage is remitted as per table above we will send plants 

 C. O. D. postage, and return whatever amount you have sent us for 

 postage. 



3c will insure your order up to $ 5.00. 



5c will insure your order up to S10.00. 



We use light ventilated crate? and patented mailing cartons 

 in ^hipping parcel post. 



More Praise For The Dr. Burrill 



MR. GEO. WELCH, of Ind., writes he made a profit of $1,815.00 

 per acre from Dr. Burrill on very poor soil. 



MR. JOHN H. PALTZ, of Mass., says Dr. Burrill was my best 

 berry the past season, netting me more than $2,100.00 off* three 

 quarters of an acre. 



