GARDEN PROFITS 
There's no doubt about it, for extra money for the 
house, spending money for the children, as a real cash 
crop in which all the family can help, strawberries stand 
at the top. Everybody likes strawberries and no crop is 
easier to sell. To emphasize the appeal that strawberries 
have for the buyer notice in your favorite magazine how 
strawberries are used for eye -appeal in advertisements 
for breakfast foods and various other food products. 
They are easy to sell. Just let it be known through an ad 
in your local paper, a short notice on the radio station, 
a sign on the road and in some cases just mention the 
fact over your party line. 
ia tUede. jpikl udta Uaoe. had 
both fdeaiute and pn&jjU piam tketo bewuf fcrtdenli 
Nassau Co., N. Y., June 30, 1949. I am enclosing 
herewith a picture of a strawberry from my patch, 
your plants of course. This is the largest strawberry 
I have ever seen in my life. It weighs one ounce 
plus. 
T. H. Batcheller 
Broome Co., N. Y., March 26, 1949. Our home garden has 
always been a great delight, thanks to your strawberries. 
LeRoy MacLeod 
Baltimore Co., Md., March 21, 1949. Please send me 300 
everbearing strawberry plants. I left the selection to you last 
year and had beautiful berries from July on. Kept them back 
until sometime in June; had them in November. 
Mrs. H. G. Pocock 
Hillsboro Co., N. H., Feb. 7, 1949. Three years ago this May 
you sent me 200 strawberry plants — 100 Premier and 100 
Catskill. The following year we picked 250 quarts of beautiful 
berries. Need I say more? Enclosed find order for Midland. I am 
anxious to try them for quality and commercial use. 
Avon C. Chisholm 
Fairfield Co., Ohio, March 9, 1949. In 1947 I bought 300 
Premier and 200 Catskill from you and everybody said it was 
the nicest patch they ever saw. In 1948 I picked 800 saleable 
quarts. Fred H. Miller 
Marlboro Co., S. C, March 5, 1949. I want to thank you for 
the 500 fine Fairfax plants you sent me a short time ago. Every 
one lived and they are full of blossoms and green berries. 
Mrs. A. F. Fowler 
Preston Co., W. Va., May 9, 1949. Enclosed please find check 
for $7.88 for 400 Premier strawberry plants. Year before last I 
ordered 400 of these plants and last year we picked some of the 
nicest berries we ever saw. We Bold well over $100.00 worth 
of berries and had all we wanted for ourselves. 
Ingham Co., Mich., May 5, 1949. We bought plants from 
your Company twice and were more than pleased. From two 
hundred plants the first bearing year we picked more than two 
hundred quarts. And such berries — they were super! 
Mrs. H. A. Carnshaw 
Crawford Co., Penna., Feb. 26, 1949. In 1947 we bought 
500 Fairfax from you and never saw such wonderful berries. 
The berries were big and beautiful and the quality was grand. 
We sold them on the market and people came back for them 
once they tried them. We got a higher price for them than any 
of our other berries. Can't say enough for the Fairfax berry. 
Ray Benchat 
Bucks Co., Penna., June 13, 1949. On March 2, 1948, I pur- 
chased from you 1,000 Fairfax strawberry plants. The plants 
arrived in A- 1 condition and we had a wonderful looking straw- 
berry bed. We have kept a record. The total was 830 boxes 
picked and for these we received $375.00. We started to sell 
them for 60c a box right from the house, and finished by letting 
the people pick the berries themselves for 20c a box. We find 
the Fairfax to be tops. Walter Molden 
