Wholesale Price List of Nursery Stock 



From the Nursery to the Planter 



Stokes Seed Farms Com Growers 



WINDERMOOR FARM. MOORESTOWN, NEW JERSEY 



Order early, as all kinds of fruit trees, plants and in fact all kinds of nursery stock is very scarce all 

 over the entire country. Remit by P. O. Money Order, Express Order, Draft or Personal Check. 



f 



Extra Early Giant 



Strawberries 



$500 to $800 an Acre from Our 

 Select Varieties of Strawberries 



This is the Time to 

 Grow Strav/bcrries 



Prices for strawberries In the years 1919 and 1920 were excep- 

 tionally high, selling for 40 to 50 cents a Quart. The luscious 

 strawberry is for once as expensive as it is delicious, with the 

 prospect of higher prices for the next four or five years at least. 

 The prices paid were really almost as good as digging gold In 

 California. 



Never was there a time when a little money could be invested 

 ir the small fruit business with the certain prospects of such 

 enormous profits; $30 or .$40 invested in plants in the spring 

 of 1919 grew into $600 to $800 in the spring of 1920. The 

 retail stores and canning factories could not get enough to supply 

 their demands, notwithstanding the enormous prices they offered 

 and paid. Now is the opportune time to start in the small fruit 

 business. Do not let the fact that the prices of plants have 

 advanced somewhat stop you ; they had to advance, but just 

 compare the price of plants with the advanced price of the fruit 

 and you will see that our prices are very reasonable. 



Healthy, strong, well-rooted plants are necessary if you expect 

 to grow large crops of fruit tliat bring you $500 to $800 an acre. 

 Our Guaranteed New-Land Plants are large, healthy and strong for 

 they are grown on the best soil that Mother Earth can supply. 



Rev. G. M. Welmer, of Dayton, Tenn., cleared $925.60 to the 

 acre on his strawberry farm. Mr. E. D. Mintzinger, of Willapa, 

 Wash., cleared $1,125 an acre on his strawberries. 



Our Bi^ 4 Money-Making Varieties 



Earliest to the latest, covering the entire season. Best for the 

 family garden, best in quality and productiveness, the cream of 

 over 400 varieties. 



EXTRA EARLY GIANT. Earliest of all, and decidedly the finest 

 and best very early strawberry grown. Berries very large, brilliant, 

 scarlet crimson, conical with pointed tips, color all over at once, 

 have a delightful aroma and a very rich mild flavor: very firm, 

 sweet and red to the center; have large green caps, hence excep- 

 tionally showy and very attractive. It is the largest, finest 

 flavored, and best very early berry we have ever fruited. 



DR. BURRELL. (The MilUon Dollar Strawberry.) The berries 

 resemble the Dunlap but much larger and hold their size through- 

 out the entire season. Berry a beautiful dark red color which 

 extends from center to circumference. Have excellent, sweet, mild 

 flavor which is very delicious ; enormously productive, very firm 

 and excellent for canning or dessert. Plants hardy, thrifty and 

 succeed well on any soil and under any ordinary condition. 



GIBSON. The great nioney maker. For making money from 

 strawberries grow the Gibson. Strawberry growers find it the 

 most profitable berry they have ever grown. It is the most pro- 

 ductive and profitable berry grown. Last year it yielded growers 

 as high as $800 an acre under common, ordinary m'ethod of culti- 

 vation. It is suited for home as well as market. It is wonderfully 

 productive, outbearing other varieties with its large attractive, 

 well flavored berries which hold their size throughout the season. 



EXTRA LATE GIANT. The latest strawberry grown, ripening 

 after Chesapeake. The berries are immense size — truly mam- 

 moth—many of them mt-asuring 4i/4 to 6 inches around and hold 

 their size well to the end of the season; surface smooth and 

 glossy, bright flarao color, meaty texture, fine quality, mild, rich, 

 sweet with the flavor and aroma of the wild berry pronounced. 

 One picker counted the berries just as they came and it only 

 took 12 to 14 berries to fill a quart heaping fidl. We regard them 

 as the largest and mo^t beautiful strawberry we have ever seen. 

 Giant as to size and yield. The berries are produced in Clusters 

 of 6 to a dozen ; :strong fruit stalks. Succeeds upon almost 

 any soil and under all conditions and is called the "Poorman'a 

 Berry" and the "Kichman's Berry." . 



Bid 4 Collections 



. '^S'. Iv, strong plants of each of the four varieties, prepaid 



for $1.50. 100 plants in all, the earUest to the latest. 



„■» strong plants of each of the four varieties prepaid 



for J 1. 00. 48 plants in ail. 



Dr. Burrell 



Gibson 



Everbearing 



From letters and conversation with our customers, we conclude 

 that the greatest human joy of the dinner table Is the serving of 

 strawberries — ripe, Ijeautiful, cool and luscious ; fresh picked from 

 one's own plants. Prom early in May until November we have 

 them in abundance. Heaped high in the dish, drenched with 

 cream, smothered *in sugar, there is no pleasanter luxury on earth 

 — unless it's another dish of strawberries. The following varieties 

 will grow in any soil and in any climate. 



THE FAMOUS STANDPAT. Fruits regularly, spring, summer 

 and fall: fine berries remaining under tlie dense foliage till Novem- 

 ber, when tlie snow flies. So delirion.^i sind ini'd flevoroH^ ir- 

 valicfs unable to tolich other fruits, eat them with great benefit. 

 Standpat is by far the largest in size, sweetest* and the most 

 productive of them all, outyielding any variety we have ever tried: 

 yielding with us at the rate of 12,000 quarts an acre in the fall 

 of the first year they are planted. We believe it will produce 

 20,000 quarts to tlie acre If given good culture. During Septem- 

 ber, October and up into November the plants were loaded with 

 ripe and green berries; very often 100 to 150 berries were on a 

 single plant. Young runner plants will fruit in a few weeks after 

 they are set and will produce a good crop. We have been growing 

 this variety now for six years and it has surpassed any other 

 variety we have tested, in productiveness, thriftiness, large size 

 and every other quality. We have tested over twenty varieties, 

 beginning with Pan-American, the original and first Everbearing 

 strawberry put out; followed by Americus, Francis, Progressive, 

 Superb, Peerless, and all other varietiis as tliey came out, but 

 have never found any that compares with Standpat. 

 LUCKY BOY. This new variety makes plants as fast as Superb 

 and is three times as productive; berries larger, firmer, of better 

 color and so far ahead of Superb that we have discontinued grow- 

 ing the Superb entirely. Lucky Boy made a fine healthy growth 

 and fruited continuously tliroughout the summer and fall and were 

 loaded with fru|t when winter came. 



KOSATO. This new variety produced a large amount of fruit all 

 season on both old and young plants and the berries wire much 

 larger than Superb or Progressive: we believe this grand new 

 variety will take first rank among the fall-bearing strawberries. 

 Berries large, fine flavor, sweet, and good quality: deep red color, 

 flrm and keeps well. Plants hardy, thrifty, healthy and produc- 

 tive. We are very favorably impressed with its behavior. 

 HONEYMOON. Near brother to Kosato; originated in Michigan 

 Honeymoon is just about equal in every respect to Kosato, but 

 fruit is not quite so large. 

 The fruit tliat each in- 

 dividual plant will pro- 

 duce is enormous. Of 

 good size, round, deep 

 red and firm. A very 

 promising variety and you 

 should try it. as we be- 

 lieve you will find it a 

 very profitable variety to 

 grow. 



Extra Late Giant 



Strawberries 



Bid 4 Everbearing Strawberries 



Tou can have "LABGE HANDSOME STBAWBEBKIES" all 

 summer and fall by planting some of our "GENUINE EVEB- 

 BEABING STEAWBEEBIES." Tou don't have to wait; set 

 plants in the spring and have a big crop of berries in the fall. 

 They are delicious for shortcake, fine for canning and sell like 

 hot cakes, 



Bcnanzii Collections ^ 



No. 1. 25 plants each, Standpat, Lucky Boy, Kosato, ani'' 

 Honeymoon; 100 plants in all, delivered free for $3.50. / 



N. 2. 12 plants each, Standpat, Lucky Boy, Kosato, a/ 



Honej-moon; 48 plants in all, delivered free for only $2.00. J • 



This collection should produce $25.00 worth of berries the Ilk 

 year. \ 



Price of Everbearing Strawberries 



50 Plants at 100 and 500 at 1,000 Bates 



By Express, 



By Mail Postpaid Not Prepaid ■ 



6 Doz. 25 100 100 250 1000 



Standpat $0.60 $1.00 $1.50 $5.00 $4.50 $11.00 $40.00 



Lucky BojT 40 .75 1.25 4.00 3.50 8.00 30.00 



Kosato 40 .75 1.25 4.00 3.50 8.00 30.00 



Honeymoon 40 .75 1.25 4.00 3.50 8.00 30.00 



Price of Standard Strawberries 



By Mall, Postpaid Not Postpaid 

 By Express, 



Doz. 25 100 100 250 1000 



Aroma $0.40 $0.60 $1.25 $1.00 $2.25 $8.00 



Dr. Burrell 40 .60 1.25 1.00 2.25 8.00 



Extra EarU^ Giant... .40 .60 1.25 1.00 2.25 8.00 



Extra Late Giant 40 .60 1.25 1.00 2.25 8.00 



Gibson 40 .60 1.25 1.00 2.25 8.00 



Gandy 40 .60 1.25 1.00 2.00 7.50 



Lady Corneille 40 .60 1.25 1.00 2.00 7.50 



Senator Dunlap 40 .60 1.25 1.00 2.00 7.00 



NOTE — All plants are nicely trinamcd and tied in bunches of 

 25 plants each, packed in crates or baskets with plenty of damp 

 packing so tiiey will carry safely across the continent. 



Standpat 



