GREAT CROPS OF STRAWBERRIES AND HOW TO GROW THEM 
Copyright 1915 by R. M. Kellogg Co., Three Rivers, Mich. 
ONWARD, ANOTHER OF THE GREAT EVERBEARERS 
T^HE description griven under the illustration of the Forward variety will serve very well for Onward. While there are slight 
differences, the appearance, flavor and general characteristics of Onward are so similar to both Forward and Advance as to 
render these three wonderful varieties almost identical one with the other. Onward is grown only at cur farm in Three Rivers. 
10,000 Progressive plants, it is my opinion I 
would have more than paid all expenses to date. " 
Kellogg's Prize a Marvelous Yielder 
pROM all parts of the country come letters re- 
ferring to the Kellogg's Prize as the greatest 
of the pistillates and the heaviest yielder of any 
known variety. We quote a few testimonials 
from a countless number to show that our own 
estimate of the worth of this extraordinary va- 
riety is fully confirmed in the experience of our 
patrons : 
Score me with ripe berries June 4th on the Kellogg's Prize 
plants you shipped me in April. Orrin E. Dunlap, New York. 
The berries you sent me last year all did well this spring, 
the Kellogg's Prize being especially fine. In fact, I consider 
it the finest strawberry I have ever seen. R. H. Triplett, Ohio. 
The Kellogg's Prize is the most wonderful berry I have 
ever grown. The fifty plants bought of you in 1913 yielded in 
July, 1914 sixty baskets of beautiful berries. Wm. J. Reynolds, 
Connecticut. 
From one-twelfth of an acre, or less, of Kellogg's Prize I 
sold over a hundred dollars worth of berries. F. K. Haines, 
Connecticut. 
Those Kellogg's Prize plants are surely some fruiters and 
they certainly are beautiful berries. Jno. C. Cann, Ohio. 
The Kellogg's Prize plants bought of you in 1914 are the 
best pistillate plants I ever saw. "They grew several hundred 
berries to the plant and two-thirds of the berries were of good 
size. Everyone who tasted them said they were the sweetest 
berries they ever had eaten. J. Mason Sivadie, Washington. 
TN acknowledging the receipt of a copy of our 
■'■ book, F. K. McNeil of Vermont says: "Your 
catalog came among a dozen, and you have them 
all going and coming. Yours Truly is an old- 
timer (past thres score). I have grown berries 
for fun and money for more than forty years. 
My berries are the standard from Burlington to 
Rutland in the Champlain Valley. I have fruited 
Chesapeake for many years with great pleasure 
and profit. ' ' 
An Appreciative Word About 
Our Book 
A MONO the thousands of people who wrote U3 
•'^ for our book last year, was Karl Clarke 
Utley, a prominent citizen of Toronto, Canada. 
The book was sent him, and some time later Mr. 
Utley sent us this kind and gracious tribute to 
the value and importance of "Great Crops of 
Strawberries and How to Grow Them." From 
this letter we quote: 
I do not think you can ever know the amount of real 
good horticultural missionary work you are doing in 
sending out these books from year to year. I am town 
bred and town fed, but I am more than interested in the 
"Back to the land" idea I am convinced that there are 
thousands in our towns and large cities who, if they 
would study and learn something of intensive culture 
and would turn to small plots of land, would be much 
better off in every respect, especially in a financial way. 
This is the foundation of many of the other blessings of 
earth. 
This book you are sending out I do not regard as a 
catalog. I shall keep it in my library as a book of refer- 
ence and text book. The information it imparts is 
worth a very great deal, and while it is distinctively a 
"Strawberry" book, its close relation to the soil cannot 
help but make it stimulating in interest in other crops. 
It seems to me that a man with three acres and a firm 
like yours to rely on from whom to get good plants and 
the best of advice, should become independent in ten or 
fifteen years and lay by enough to make him beyond the 
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