^^ONDON BROS, SEE DSMEN ^ l°iW.^^^^^Fr.^£E°^g 
EVERBEARING STRAWBERRIES 
THE GREAT NEW SENSATION 
Every Garden Should Have 
a Bed of the 
Wonderful 
Everbearing 
Strawberries. 
Just Think 
Of It- 
Fresh Fruit 
from Early 
Spring until 
Late Fall 
PROGRESSIVE— THE NEW SENSATION 
Tou can have strawberries just as easily In the fall as in the spring- by nlantlne- th« 
Progress ve Strawberry, which is the best of all the fall or ever-Searfng s^^twhefries 
This variety will produce heavy crops in the fall of as fine berries as any spring-ripen ins 
strawberries. Truly a luxury for home and profitable for market. Think of haXs aU 
the berries you can use on your table during the months of September. October aid 
November and later, if not killed by freezing weather. 
If you grow them to sell you can get your own prices for strawberries at that season 
or the year and there is no strawberry known that is so prolific as the Progressive It 
commences blooming early in the spring and the blooms should be kept removed until 
about the middle of August. By doing this you get a larger yield In the fall than you 
would If allowed to bear all summer. So prolific are they that the young plants that are 
formed in the summer -will bear in the fall of the same year; in fact, the young plants 
•will very often send up fruit stems before they become rooted. They are not a novelty 
nor an experiment, but are a success and you can have strawberries as well in the fall 
as In the spring — strawberries of good quality for your table every day during the late 
summer and fall; strawberries for Thanksgiving. Many who read this have, no doubt, 
heard of fall-bearing strawberries. Many have not. Remember, we are living in an age 
of rapid advancement that is giving us things that a few years ago we never thought of. 
You should plant some of these, the latest thing in the strawberry world. Tou will 
have to do this in order to stay up with the crowd, and vou want to do tliat. Dozen, 45 
cents; 25 plants, 75 cents; 50 plants, $1.40; 100 plants, $2.50, postpaia. 
The photograph of bunched plants shows the way our plants are bunched for shipping 
When plants are received, just before setting out, take a sharp knife and cut off about 
one-third of the roots; set at once and you will have stronger plants. Remove the blos- 
soms on newly planted strawberries as soon as they appear. If they are allowed to fruit 
It will injure vitality of plants. 
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