FAMILY 

 PROFIT 

 PLOTS 



Housewives for generations have been interested in Extra Money in addition to their regular household 

 funds. It may be for a church group, a community project, a special piece of furniture, a family vacation, 

 to start the boy's college fund or the daughter's trousseau, or any one or more dozens of other worthy 

 projects. 



On small farms or even town and city lots where a little extra space of good land is available, a 

 small planting of strawberries is one of the quickest and best ways to start earning this extra money. 

 Why are strawberries so outstanding for this purpose? Here's why: 



1. A fairly large return can be expected from a small space. 



2. Previous experience is not necessary. Beginners can and do every year grow nice crops of luscious 

 strawberries successfully. 



3. The Work is light and healthy — suitable for young folks just starting or old folks who still want to 

 be useful. 



4. A part-time job can be rounded out to help make a full-time income. 



5. Strawberries are easy to sell. Their beauty, delightful flavor and usefulness appeal to all. 



6. Extra money plots may well be oversize family gardens where all the blessings named on the 

 previous page can be counted as dividends in addition to the actual cash to be expected. 



St. Clair Co., Ill, Feb. 7, 1958. "Last year I sold 

 $80.00 worth of berries from two rows 150 feet 

 long. Also put 40 qts. in the freezer and ate all 

 we wanted during the season. Then toward the 

 end of the season when the berries got small the 

 wife made 24 pints of preserves." LOUIS PAYER, 

 JR. 



Money For Granddaughter 



Jefferson Co., Ky., June 26, 

 1958. "I will want 500 more 

 Pocahontas for my next order. 

 I had wonderful luck with 

 my last plants. I gave my 

 whole strawberry patch to my 

 little granddaughter. She took 

 in $12.00 to $17.00 a day out 

 of the patch. I had the best luck any man could 

 have with all my plants; never lost a plant in 

 planting." CHAS. SKIDMORE. 



Good Speed and Good Price 

 Means Profit 



Carroll Co.. Md., July 7, 1958. "I bought from 

 you in the spring of 1957 1.200 strawberry plants 

 of six different varieties. They were the finest 

 plants that money could bu/ anywhere —True to 

 Name — and I had one of the largest crops of 

 berries anyone could raise on that space of 

 ground. I picked 1500 quarts or better; retailed 

 at an average of 45c per quart; many times only 

 15 berries to the quart." ROBERT J. HUNTER. 



Sold Fast 



Warrick Co., Indiana, June 21, 

 1958. "Last year we bought 

 500 Tenn. Beauty and 100 

 Pocahontas plants from you. 

 This year we picked 1040 

 quarts of fine berries from 

 them. The Pocahontas were 

 the largest berries we have 

 ever seen. We sold the berries as fast as we 

 could pick them and could have sold many 

 more." FRED C. BAKER. 



750 Quarts Prime Berries From 

 450 Plants 



Orange Co., N. Y., Feb. 5, 

 1958. "Enclosed please find 

 my order for 1,000 plants. I 

 must let you know how well 

 satisfied we were with the 

 plants we ordered from you 

 two years ago. We planted 

 450 plants and the first sea- 

 son we harvested over 700 quarts of prime berries. 

 We gave 50 plants to a friend and he also had 

 a grand yield." THEODORE M. BURNETT. 



Real Profit 



Crawford Co., Pa., Apr. 3, 1958. "We bought 100 

 Premier in 1955 and had very good success with 

 them. Besides our own use we sold in two years 

 $100.00 worth." S H ROUECHE. 



