BERRY GARDENS and what they will mean 



Every good garden that will grow vegetable crops should have a few rows of strawberries for 

 home use. The introduction of higher quality varieties like Fairfax, Dorsett, Narcissa, and South- 

 land (for the South), will increase your enjoyment of them fresh oft' the vines, or at meal time. 

 You will be proud to show them to and share them with your friends. A small amount of expense 

 and eff"ort on a small garden plot of strawberries will be repaid in pleasure and profit many times. 

 200 plants will make a nice small garden; 500 a fine large garden. 



Berry Garden Dividends 



1. Plenty of luscious berries over a long sea- 

 son, right fresh otf the vines. 



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

 or otherwise. 



3. Strawberry shortcake, strawberry ice cream, 

 cool drinks from strawberry juices — and other 

 ways. 



4. Berries to can and preserve for winter use. 



5. Enough to share with your friends. 

 G. Ready money from the salable surplus. 



7. With the Everbearers, berries for use all 

 through the late summer and fall. 



8. As suggested above, the new, high quality 

 berries, Dorsett and Fairfax, will add a touch of 

 royal flavor with which you will be delighted. 



Good for You 



Allen's Plants Do Well 'Way Up North 



Producing Big Crop in Maine 



Oxford Co., Maine, June 1.5, 1934. — I have a nice 

 patch of Premier strawberry plants I received 

 from you last spring- and am pleased to say that 

 I have got the largest crop of berries growing on 

 those plants 1 have ever seen grow. There are so 

 many berries on them that I do not think they 

 can all mature.— Mr. Geo. H. Cummings. 



Doing Fine in Minnesota 



"Winona Co., Minn., March 1, 1934. — Am basing 

 my order on your statement of values. Premier 

 bought in 1932 doing fine. — A. O. Gross. 



Wonderfully Well in New Hampshire 



Hillsboro Co., N. H., Sept. 5, 1934. — Your excel- 

 lent plants have done wonderfully well for me, 



and I surely wouldn't call this a very favorable 

 year for anything to get a start. To say I am 

 well pleased would be putting it mildly. — Earle 

 M. Gray. 



Fine in Vermont, in Spite of Drought 



Orleans Co., Vt., March 19, 1934. — Plants bought 

 from you last year are the finest 1 ever had in 

 spite of a very severe drought all summer. 

 Thank you. — J. H. Wilson. 



Out-yield Others in Northern New York 



Herkimer Co., N. T., April 13, 1934. — I write a 

 few lines to inform you in regard to your strain 

 of Glen Mary strawberries. In this section of 

 the North they out-yield and out-sell any other, 

 kind unless it is Premier on well drained soil. — 

 Clarence W. Joslin. 



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