The Choice of Many Growers 



Premier for Early — Chesapeake for Late — Mastodon for Everbearing 



Wants More Premier 



Franklin Co., Ohio, March 10, 1932.— I sent for 5000 

 plants last year and I am very well pleased with them. 

 They grew very fine. I am sending you the money for 

 6000 more Premier. Raymond Barrett. 



Premier Berries Nicest Ever 



Lackawanna Co., Pa., June 2, 1932. I bought 200 

 Premier strawberry plants from you last year and did 

 not tell you how they bore this year. I had plenty of 

 runners and the bushes were loaded with berries. They 

 were very big and people couldn't believe I could raise 

 such big berries. They used to call up and come to the 

 house after them. Some people wouldn't buy other ber- 

 ries but mine, which I raised from plants I bought from 

 you. They were the nicest berries I ever raised. 



A. L. Chickey. 



Premier, Big Joe, Chesapeake 



Suffolk Co., N. Y., May 3, 1932.— I received the 400 

 strawberry plants last evening in good shape. They were 

 nice plants with good roots like your picture on page 5 

 of your catalog, and there was good full count. I put 

 them in good cool water last night, and set them out 

 today, 100 Premier, 100 Big Joe, 100 Chesapeake and 

 100 Mastodon. If anyone wants just one kind, tell them 

 to plant Premier ; if two kinds, add Big Joe. If they 

 want a late berry, plant Chesapeake. I have raised these 

 berries for several years and they have never disap- 

 pointed me. But Premier is King of Berries. The Suc- 

 cess does fine here too, except too soft to ship, but a fine 

 family berry and a big bearer. Aroma, Dr. Burrill, and 

 Ford are no good here. Pearl, Gandy and Wm. Belt are 

 all O. K. Mr. C. H. Helme. 



Premier and Chesapeake Stood Two Frosts 



Franklin Co., Vt., May 25, 1932.— The Premier and 

 Chesapeake strawberry plants that I have purchased from 

 you are the best I ever saw. They have stood two good 

 frosts this spring and now they are all in blossom and 

 will have a good crop of berries this year. I expect to 

 buy more plants next year. Alfred M. Zabaska. 



Chesapeake Berries Large 



Anne Arundel Co., Md., March 6, 1932. — I received the 

 Premier and Blakemore plants. They are surely pretty 

 and they were packed neatly, and in such a way that 

 they arrived in perfect condition. About three years ago 

 I bought some Chesapeake from you and they certainly 

 do bear large berries. James Crist. 



Mastodon Berries Two Months After Planting 



Indiana Co., Pa., Feb. 12, 1932. — Enclosed you will find 

 a money order for which send me 200 more Mastodon 

 plants. I planted 200 last year and picked berries off 

 of them exactly two months after I planted the runners 

 out, and when I covered them in the fall they were hang- 

 ing full of half ripe frozen berries. You fellows sure 

 know your berries. E. M. Biggerstaff. 



Good Plants of Mastodon 



Lancaster Co., Pa., April 12, 1932. Just a few lines to 

 inform you that the Mastodon plants arrived in excellent 

 shape and that they are the best plants I have ever pur- 

 chased from any grower. Clinton H. Martin. 



Mastodon So Good, He Wants More 



Douglas Co., Nebr., Sept. 29, 1932. This spring the 

 writer bought of your firm 100 Mastodon plants, every 

 one of which lived, and I am gathering about one quart 

 of very choice berries from them every other day. They 

 have been such a success that I am going to put out 

 more next spring. Mr. Clinton C. Gray. 



90 Buds and Berries on One Mastodon Plant 



Perry Co., Ohio, May 10, 1932. — I am taking the pleas- 

 ure of writing you about the Mastodon strawberry plants 

 of yours that I set out in April, 1931. I wrote you 

 about the worms but I kept resetting until last month, 

 and I raised 3000 new plants and they are about as full 

 of blooms as there is any room for. I took the time 

 to count the buds and berries on one plant and it had 90. 

 If you have anything in Maryland that can beat it, please 

 let me know. Every one here comes to see them and re- 

 marks what a fine strawberry patch we have. 



J. D. Lehew. 



Dorsett Berries 

 Large, Pretty 



and "Oh, So Cood" 



