Allen's Book of Berries — 1930 



Nice plants all ready for your garden. 



What A Small Strawberry Garden Will Mean 



A small plot of 200 to 500 plants, according to size of family, will assure you 

 the following: 



1. Plenty of luscious berries over a long season, righc; fresh off the vines. 



2. All you want for table use, "sugared down," or otherwise. 



3. Strawberry shortcake, strawberry ice-cream, cool drinks from strawberry 

 iuices — and ot]">er ways. 



4. Plenty of berries to can and preserve for winter use. 



5. Enough to share with your friends. 



6. Ready Money from the Salable Surplus. 



7. With the Everbearers, plenty for table use all through the late summer 

 and fall. 



Use the best varieties (page 17), and order plants now for your strawberry 

 garden. You'll be surprised how little it takes for so much benefit and pleasure. 



Wonderful for Home Use. 



_ Albemarle Co., Va., March 29, 1929. — Your plants are wonderful. Several years ago I 

 decided to put out 500 plants for home use. You should have seen that patch of berries. We 

 picked 92 gallons and many were eaten in the patch and everybody said they were the largest 

 berries they ever saw. — B. Y. SUTHERLAND. 



Premier — A Fine Yield — Largest Berries. 



Durham Co., N. C, June 15, 1929. — I am just writing to tell you how well pleased I am with 

 the strawberries I bought from you a year ago this spring. I planted 150 Premier and this spring 

 -we picked 270 quarts and the wet weather caused us to have to throw away lots of them. They 

 are the largest berries I ever saw. I shall order more from you next spring. — JAMES R. BYRD. 



Berries Every Week Until Frost. 



Monmouth Co., N. J., March 22, 1929. — I purchased from you last spring 1928, 150 plants 

 of Champion Everbearing strawberry plants, and I picked about 6 quarts of berries a week up 

 until tlT« frost came here.— THOMAS A. HAYES. 



