Superior Plants 



A BERRY GARDEN 



FOR BETTER HEALTH, ADDED PLEASURE AND A BIT OF LUXURY 



Lots of Luscious Berries from a Lovely Little Garden add Luxury to your Living. 

 Better Health 



1. The exercise and fresh air incident to planting, growing and picking strawberries 

 means better health for all who participate — young and old. 



2. Strawberries are among the highest of all foods in Vitamin C and frequent and 

 plentiful use contributes to the good health of all the family. 



Added Pleasure 



1. A taste treat. Nothing pleases the palate of more people than luscious strawberries 

 dewy fresh from the vines. 



2. Friendliness. Sharing promotes friendship. A quart or so of delectable ripe straw- 

 berries is a gift suitable for your closest friends and neighbors or for your most dis- 

 tinguished guest. 



3. A budget help. Why spend money for lesser desserts when strawberries in pro- 

 fusion are so easy to have? 



4. Quick freezing. Retain much of the flavor and freshness of strawberries for en- 

 joyment the year round. 



A Bit of Luxury 



The price you pay when you buy good berries and the delicacies of taste and flavor 

 which they provide would rate strawberries as a luxury. But luxury or not, with a 

 strawberry garden of your own, they can be readily available with a minimum of 

 time and effort for anyone who owns or has available a small plot of ground. Plan 



your Berry Garden today! 

 150 Plants— 196 Quarts & Then Some 



Pulaski Co., Arkansas. May 

 28, 1959. "From the 150 ber- 

 ry plants bought from you in 

 February, 1958, we picked 

 196 quarts of berries in May, 

 1959. which excluding those 

 we ate and gave to our 

 neighbors, sold for $47.00. Of 

 the six varieties used the Armore and Pocahontas 

 exceeded all others in both quality and yield." 

 W. F. Kilman. 



Strawberry King 



Bristol Co., Mass. Feb. 13, 1959. Your plants have 

 gained for us the name of "Strawberry King" of 

 this area. We use your plants yearly to prevent 

 disease in our fields. Even in the worst years of 

 drought we can rely on $200.00 from our patch, 

 plus 50 quarts in the freezer along with 100 jars 

 of strawberry jam." Gordon Bramwell. 



Fine Fruiting Beds 

 Grown by Elijah KeUough and wife of Ross Co., Ohio 



