jy-Saving Offers 



ON LAST PAGE 



hclude Premier, Big Joe and Chesa- 

 aebest varieties. We supply you the 



They bear the finest berries, 

 •enclosed a spe- 

 :crd order sheet 

 trn envelope for 

 *nience. Mark 

 |1 Offers that 

 n enclose remit- 

 i put in the 

 trill do the rest. 



Never Found Any Better Than 

 Premier. 



Cattaraugus Co., New York 

 The Premiers I purchased in 

 1922, of which there were 250, all 

 lived but 2 or 3 plants, despite a 

 cold, dry spell just after setting. 

 There may be better berries, but I 

 have never found them yet. 



Mr. J. V. Hills. 



r of the Strawberry 

 Patch. 



. .Mo., Feb. 19, 1924 

 by far the best 

 I. can grow, and all 

 of Premier is right, 

 te "Jack Dempsey" 

 soerry patch. I am 

 le what Chesapeake 

 lithe plant itself is 

 Will recommend 

 ts to any wanting 



L. F. Morlock. 



Chesapeake- -outsells them all 



Quart for quart, Chesapeake will outsell any strawberry ever put on the market. 



The berries are simply wonders. They are very large and hold their size well 

 throughout the season. They are uniform in shape, a bright rich red throughout. 



Chesapeake berries are unsurpassed in quality. 

 They will outsell them all. They will outship 

 any other large berry on the market. The plants 

 blossom late and escape late frosts. 



For home use, local market, or shipping, the 

 Chesapeake is supreme as a late berry. You will 

 be repaid many times for planting and culti- 

 vating Chesapeakes. 



drown From Allen's Plants 



D. C, June 7, 1924. 

 I am now harvesting Premier strawberries from the couple of 

 thousand plants bought from you in the spring of 1923. They are 

 bringing the top price in the Washington market, and are creating a 

 sensation in the neighbor.iood where they are mown, which is in Prince 

 George Co., Md., just outside the District of Columbia. A neighbor 

 who bought his plants from Michigan at a fancy price said yesterday, 

 "I thought I had some fine strawberries, but yours beat any I ever 

 saw." The fancy ones run about 20 to the quart, and the average 

 about 40 to 45. I have several acres of the finest black woods mold soil, 

 and am getting lots of it ready for Allen berries, which have fully jus- 

 tified the advice given me by a pomological expert in the Department 

 of Agriculture. "Allen, of Salisbury, is a good strawberry man, and 

 you can trust him. 



Lindsay S. Perkins. 



