GREAT CROPS OF STRAWBERRIES AND HOW TO GROW THEM 
Copyright 1911 by R M. Kellogg Co., Three Rivers. Mich. 
19 
Helen Davis Justifies Our Highest Claims 
THE wonderful results received from the Helen 
Davis plants, as set forth in our 1911 book, 
were repeated last season, and not only did 
we have opportunity to test them under the most 
trying conditions on our own farms, but letters 
received from customers in many sections testi- 
fied to the beauty and strength of these surpas- 
singly fine plants and proved that their strong 
qualities persisted in all sections of the continent, 
just as we were confident would prove true be- 
cause of its fine performance here. 
Two examples of letters received from customers 
who set out Helen Davis plants in 1911 are here- 
with given^one from the Atlantic coast, the 
other frorri far-away British Columbia on the 
Pacific coast; and the writei-s are equally en- 
thusiastic: 
Atco, N. J.. August 29, 1911. 
'A thing of beauty is a joy forever.' Such is your new 
strawberry, Helen Davis--it beats everything I ever 
saw, both for foliage and close setting in the bed, and I 
am proud of my purchase. I thought Early Ozark 
would never be beat, and while I think of it as highly as 
I did when I wrote you last year about it, still, in my 
opinion, Helen Davis wins the day. One plant of Helen 
Davis has made already a bed nine feet long, well and 
close set, and two to three feet wide. 
W. H. L. Openshav.-. 
Keremeos, B. C, June 25, 1911. 
The plants that I got from you this spring are doing 
splendidly. I find that the Helen Davis is the thriftiest 
and the most rapid-growing plant of the four kinds I 
planted, Longfellow coming: a i lnse second. P. F. QuANT. 
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HELEN DAVIS STRAWBERRIES AS SEEN THROUGH THE PHOTOGRAPHER S CAMERA 
