PITTSVILLE, MD. 



IIHUllllllll 



25 100 250 500 1000 g V g 



Parsons' Beauty .25 .75 1.50 2.25 4.00 -a o g 



Paul Jones (Imp) .25 .75 1.50 2.25 4.00 u •& 



^ Pittsville .35 1.00 2.00 3.75 7.00 §«„^ 



Rewastico .25 .75 1.50 2.25 4.00 "C * *g •§ 



-. Ryckman .25 .75 1.50 2.25 4.00 °"g * +* 



Stevens' Late Champion .25 .75 1.50 2.25 4.00 B § w rt 



Senator Dunlap 25 .65 1.25 2.00 3.50 " u g 



Sample (Imp) .25 .75 1.50 2.25 4.00 g «8 •§' 5 



Success .25 .75 1.50 2.25 4.00 g e 'g > 



Sharpless 25 .75 1.50 2.25 4.00 ~ | S O 



Tennessee Prolific 25 .65 1.25 2.00 3.50 ^^^ 



Twilley 25 .75 1.50 2.25 4.00 S g .M 



Wm. Belt .25 .75 1.50 2.25 4.00 ~ % | « 



v Warren 25 .75 1.50 2.25 4.00 * ro 5 -° 



Warfield (Imp) 25 .65 1.25 2.00 3.50 g a ^ >> 



Fall-Bearing « g ° § 



Americus 35 1.00 2.00 3.75 7.00 £ >» >> g 



Ideal 35 1.00 2.00 3.75 7.00 g g § ^ 



Great Northern 3.00 TZ § m § 



Peerless 35 1.00 2.00 3.75 7.00 >, § rt >» 



Progressive 35 1.00 1.75 3.25 6.00 S ^ -2 o 



Stand Pat 1.25 4.00 g § a 



Superb 35 1.00 2.00 3.75 7.00 S *E >> 



September Prices of Strawberry Plants 



If you want your Strawberry Plants in September add to the above prices as 

 follows: 5 cents on each 25, 15 cents on each 100, 30 cents on each 250, 55 cents 

 on each 500, $1.00 on each 1,000. 



Fall-Bearing Strawberries 



Another year has proven that fall-bearing strawberries are the most valu- 

 able addition to the strawberry world that has ever been known. All over the 

 country people are beginning to realize their possibilities, and those who a year 

 or two ago were skeptical are now enthusiastic. 



Remember, you take no chances in planting these berries, for they are a 

 proven success, and while the price that can be had for the fruit may not 

 always be as high as it is now, still it will be years before they are so exten- 

 sively planted that there will not be big money in growing them. 



The price of fall-bearing plants is so reasonable that you cannot afford to 

 be without them. Outside of the labor of keeping the blossoms off the first 

 year, their care is no different than that given the spring sorts, and the returns 

 they will give you the first year alone will be worth ten times the money and 

 labor expended on them. 



Clipping from the January 1918 Issue of Farm Journal 



About April 25 we set 10,000 everbearing strawberry plants, 7,000 the usual 

 way, eighteen inches by four feet, and the balance (3,000) in hills one foot by 

 twenty-six inches. First named, Progressive; last, Superb. We left all runners 

 alone on the Progressive, and cut off all runners on the Superb. Pinched off all 

 blossoms and buds till about July 10. In a few days the plants were white with 

 bloom and some of the young plants bloomed before they took root. About Aug- 

 ust 1 we commenced to pick a few quarts of berries, and all through September 

 we averaged ten thirty-two-quart crates per week. From October 1 up to Oct- 

 ober 12, the young plants were full of bloom and green berries and a sight to 

 behold . We picked more than eighty bushels in all. We are greatly pleased 

 with these everbearers, and we expect to set at least 50,000 next April and May, 

 1918, and all will be in hills and entirely of the Progressive variety. 



C. Stauffer, Ohio. 



