SUPERFECTION 



Plant any Everbearer you wish, bat we Recommend 



SUPERFECTION 



Most Productive of all the Everbearers 



Year after year we find Superfection to 

 be the best of the everbearers because it 

 is the easiest to grow, most productive of 

 fall berries, most attractive in appearance 

 and surpassed in quality only by Red Rich. 



Scoffed at as worthless by commercial 

 growers for many years, the new sawdust 

 mulch spaced plant system of growing and 

 varieties like Superfection have made ever- 

 bearers a real asset to your home garden 

 and in favorable locations a profitable 

 money crop. 



Except for the ability to produce berries 

 in late summer and fall nearly all spring 



varieties are far superior to any ever- 

 bearer. Superfection berries are light in 

 color and quite attractive in the package, 

 looking just like the picture on the next 

 page. They are firm enough to ship moder- 

 ate distances but most of them are used at 

 home or sold on local markets. The flavor 

 is quite tart, but with sugar added they 

 make a very fine addition to late summer 

 and fall desserts. 



We have the best stock of Superfection 

 plants we have had in years. Price list page 

 32. 



Enthusiasm for Everbearers 



The Berries are Delicious 



Shiawassee Co., Mich., Aug. 10, 1954. "Set out 

 two varieties of your everbearing strawberries this 

 spring and are enjoying the fruits of our labor 

 now. We have had very good luck and the berries 

 are delicious." R. B. McConkey 



Never had Seen Anything Like Superfection 

 Spokane Co., Wash., Apirl 8, 1954. "In the spring 

 of 1953 I sent to you for a trial order of Mastodon, 

 Gem and Superfection. The Mastodon I might 

 confess were all but a total failure, grew a lot of 

 tops but no berries worth mentioning, neither in 

 the spring nor fall; the Gem did very well both 

 as to plant growth and yielding fruit, but Oh 

 Boy ! Talk about tops and berries on Superfection ! 

 That's the man that came across with everything 

 it had — tops, berries and large too, and lots of 

 runners. I have never seen anything like it." 



Nels Jergensen. 

 22 



Berries until Nov. 26 



Harford Co., Md., Feb. 8, 1954. "I have planted 

 your Superfection for three years and think it will 

 be sometime before you find a better one. Last 

 year I picked 126 qts. of berries from the plants 

 I got from you and they were full of berries when 

 freezing weather hit them on Nov. 5. In 1952 we 

 picked the last berries on Nov. 26." 



C. Hollis Matthews 



On an acre basis, this is over 17,000 quarts 

 Norfolk Co., Va., March 10, 1954. "On a little 

 plot of Superfection strawberries, two beds set 

 in a 10x10 plot 12 inches apart, 4 rows in a 

 bed, I picked 40 qts. besides what the birds and 

 children got. You can figure out what that will 

 be an acre." C. C. Grinalds 



