Rayner Brothers, Salisbury, Maryland 



17 



Does It Pay To Dig Plants From 

 Your Fruiting Bed? 



If you are thinking of this consider: 



(a) The money you would receive from these plants during the two or 



three years you can fruit them. 



(b) The trouble and expense of digging and cleaning the plants with 



inexperienced help. 



(c) The time saved in planting by having plants properly cleaned and 



evenly bunched. 



(d) Time spent cleaning and digging plants when you can have our plants 



right at hand as early as spring opens, giving you the advantage of 

 planting a week or two earlier. EARLY planting is what spells 

 success in growing strawberries. 



(e) The advantage of having plants that were grown for this purpose, 



in one of the most noted strawberry sections of the world by men 

 who have had years of experience in growing strawberry plants of 

 the highest quality. 



Pleased With Plants 



Dear Sirs: Worcester Co., Mass., April 23, 1930. 



Strawberry plants arrived O. K. and am much pleased with them. 



Truly yours, Leon Tousignard. 



Fine Plants, Good Count 



Gentlemen: Lawrence Co. 



Received plants yesterday, fine plants, good count. 



Yours respectfully. 



Pa., May 22, 1930. 

 Am well pleased. 

 Fred M. Weisy. 



A Perfect Stand. 



This is our friend, Mr. John G. Heff- 

 elfinger of Northampton, Pa. in his 

 field of Rayner's Mastodon Everbear- 

 ers. These plants were set in 1930, 

 made a good bed and fruited heavily 

 all through the dry weather of that 

 summer. We visited Mr. Heffelfinger 

 last spring and he was picking the 

 heaviest crop of fancy berries we have 

 ever seen. He states "Your plants 

 are fine, from the 43,000 Mastodon I 

 ordered from you this year I have a 

 perfect stand, and by ordering from 

 you at an early date I can start pick- 

 ing 2 or 3 weeks earlier than I could 

 from Northern stock." 



OUR PLANTS ARE TRUE TO NAME 



