Quarts and Dollars 
THE supreme test of the strawberry plant is the returns it gives in the way of large 
quantities of high-grade fruit. Nobody has any interest in a plant that will not yield 
these results. It is by this test that Kellogg plants stand, and it is because the Kellogg 
plants meet every test as to quantity and quality that their fame has become world-wide, 
and our customers everywhere have won the reputation for highest quality and largest 
returns in the way of actual cash. These are strong claims, but they are verified in the 
actual experience of our friends, as are indicated in letters from them which represent 
every section of the United States and Canada. We present herewith a few of the reports 
showing yields of fruit and cash returns, expressed in terms of quarts and dollars. There 
is no reason why you should not enjoy the same degree of success that thousands of our cus- 
tomers report. All of the yields here given represent a single season's crop grown from our 
Thoroughbred strawberry plants. Could we present any stronger proof of Kellogg quality? 
Yields in Quarts 
L. T. Chamberlain of Minnesota picked 124 quarts of 
berries from a space 20 x 32 feet. 
Lyman Leonard of New York picked from a plot of 
ground 30x35 feet 403 quarts of berries. 
Wm. Drumm of Kansas picked at the rate of 10,600 
quarts to the acre. 
W. R. Miller of Massachusetts picked 500 quarts from 
50D plants. 
Chas. W. Daniels of New York picked 1365 quarts 
from one-fifth acre. 
C. E. Hull of Ontario, Canada picked 1200 quarts from 
1200 plants. 
Mrs. David Baildon of New York reports over two 
quarts of berries from each plant. 
Mr. J. E. McCullough of Illinois grew at the rate of 
10,455 quarts per acre. 
B. L. Plantz of Michigan picked 750 quarts from 500 
plants. 29 berries filled a quart box, and the berries 
sold for 12'/2C per quart. 
E. F. Cook of North Dakota picked 136 quarts of fancy 
berries from 200 plants. 
Jas. Calder of New Yofk picked from 1000 plants the 
first year 1000 quarts of berries which sold for llVac per 
quart, second year he picked 1100 quarts which sold at 
11c per quart. 
Oliver Black of Pennsylvania sold 3600 quarts from 
3000 plants. The berries sold for 8c, 10c and 15e per 
quart. 
C. W. Gifford of New York picked 200 quarts from 200 
plants. 
R. E. Roberts of Ohio picked I'/j quarts from each 
plant. 
W. H. Davis of Colorado leportsa yield of 12,600 
quarts to the acre. 
T. J. Wilson of Iowa says: "I have gathered an average 
of 9,600 quarts of berries per acre each year from Kel- 
logg plants, but never have been able to get more than 
3,200 quarts per acre from other plants. This has been 
my experience for several years." 
J. F. Thrasher of Utah gathered 16,500 quarts from 
two acres, grown in a young orchard. 
S. D. Newman of Nebraska picked at the rate of 
27,000 quarts per acre. 
J. J. Pedigo of Idaho reports 2500 quarts from 2000 
plants. 
E. W. Sluder of North Carolina picked 825 quarts from 
700 plants and sold the berries from 10c to 15c per quart. 
Yields in Dollars 
S. E. Abbott of New York sold $200.00 worth of ber- 
ries from one-quarter acre. 
S. S. Brown of Washington sold $550.00 worth of ber- 
ries from one acre. 
C. A. Hesselberth of Illinois sold $78.00 worth of ber- 
ries from 1000 plants. 
W. H. Garner of Idaho sold $125.00 worth of berries 
from one-fifth acre. 
J. C. Armbruster of Michigan realized $140.00 from 
1500 plants. 
R. A. Carpenter of Iowa made $250.00 from one-quarter 
acre. 
C. Knight of Maine made $300.00 from less than one- 
third acre. 
J. D. Alexander of Ohio realized $42.00 from one- 
twelfth of an acre. 
Robt. A. Smith of Texas sold his Kellogg berries at 
$6.00 per crate. 
W. T. Shephard of Arkansas made $54.45 from 1000 
plants. ^ 
Wm. Saunders of Washington made more than $800.00 
per acre. 
E. W. Catlin of Washington made $125.00 from one- 
quarter acre. 
F. L. Bennett of New York picked 8000 quarts from an 
acre, and sold them for $936.00. 
Elmer E. Lucas of Colorado sold from a single acre 
$1200.00 worth of berries. 
G. M. Hawley of California reports selling $3000.00 
worth of berries from two acres. 
J. A. Johansen of Nebraska cleared $670.00 from three- 
fourths of an acre. He has used Kellogg Pedigree Plants 
for seventeen consecutive years. 
W. J. Lewis of New Hampshire sold $122.00 worth of 
berries from 1000 plants. 
F. C. Ward of 'Michigan cleared $85.00 from a small 
town lot. 
F. L. Jenkins of Iowa realized $175.00 from one-fourth 
of an acre. 
John C. Hodson of Maine cleared $80.00 from $10.00 
worth of plants. 
Wesley Showalter of Indiana sold $100.00 worth of 
berries from a plot of ground 100x105 feet. 
Henry Clute of New York sold the first crop he ever 
grew from an acre of Thoroughbred plants for $888.17. 
IF you never have grown Kellogg strawberries, and enjoyed the privilege of unlimited quan- 
tities of the delicious fruit they produce or the very large cash returns they yield, do not 
postpone the pleasure or lose the profits which may be yours at the minimum of cost and labor. 
Page Forty-five 
