GREAT CROPS OF STRAWBERRIES AND HOW TO GROW THEM 
Copyright X915 by R. M. Kellogg Co., Three Rivers, Mich. 
STRAWBERRIES AND GARDEN VEGETABLES 
THOSE who have only a small plot of ground can grow garden vegetables between the strawberry rows with perfect success. 
The above photo-engraving shows how successfully this may be done. Such a garden as this adds beauty, pleasure, and 
profit to a home. The strawberry rows are forty inches apart, with a row of vegetables between each two rows of strawber- 
ries, which still leaves plenty of room for hand cultivation. The vegetables growing in this garden are beans, peas, radishes, 
lettuce, carrots, turnips, beets, salsify, spinach, and onions. You will note that both the strawberries and vegetables have 
made an unusual growth, and we can recommend this combination to everyone who has but a small plot of ground and desires 
to grow both strawberries and vegetables. This is Mrs. Beatty's own private garden. Mr. Beatty is cultivating while Mrs. 
Beatty is gathering the good things for dinner. The entire garden measures only two rods in width and five rods in length, 
and it produces more vegetables and strawberries than four or five large families can use. It's fun to grow such a gardenl 
variety. Its large and perfectly formed 
berries are so beautifully colored that they 
command the very highest price on any 
market. This variety could not have been 
more appropriately named because in plant 
growth, quantity, quality, size and color of 
fruit, it certainly is a magic gem. 
Kellogg's Prize is the late variety that al- 
ready has told its own story wherever it has 
fruited. No other late variety ever has 
equalled Kellogg's Prize in any respect. 
Late varieties, as a rule, are not heavy 
bearers, but Kellogg's Prize differs from all 
other late varieties in this respect, as it is 
exceptionally productive, and in size, beauty 
of color and delicious flavor, it takes all 
prizes. Since introducing Kellogg's Prize 
three years ago, we have sold more than a 
million plants of this variety, and these plants 
have gone to every state in the Union and 
every province in Canada, and we have yet to 
receive a single complaint. But we have re- 
ceived innumerable letters containing highest 
indorsements of this truly wonderful variety. 
These four varieties mark a new era in 
strawberry production, and we are anxiously 
awaiting the time when all of these varieties 
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have been tested on our customers' grounds. 
We are confident that growers who give 
them a fair trial will realize their highest 
expectations, and growers who do not take 
advantage of the opportunity presented in 
these four varieties will miss something 
worth while. 
Our Everbearing Varieties 
TF there were any lingering doubts in the 
minds of strawberry growers concerning 
the extraordinarily high value of the ever- 
bearing strawberries, the season of 1915 
must certainly have given complete as- 
surance, not only of their reliability and 
permanency, but of their unusual quality and 
the large profits they insure to the grower. 
Everbearing plants set in the spring of 1914 
began yielding in 1915 along with the early, 
mid-season and late standard varieties, and 
the fruit of the everbearers equalled in every 
way in quality and quantity the highest 
grades of the standard varieties. And when 
the fruiting season of the standard varieties 
was over the everbearers continued fruiting 
throughout the mid-summer and late summer 
seasons and then on up to hard freezing 
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