m R.M.KELLOGG COMPANY. THREE RIVERS. MICn. 
KELLOGG'S DUNLAPS SERVED WITH SUGAR 
THIS 13 an ideal way to serve strawberries. Long stems should be left on the berries so that they may be held in 
the hand while dipping them into the sugar and eating them. The berries are served on a large plate with a 
small dish filled with sugar in the center, as shown here. 
licited letters which have come to us from all 
sections of the United States and Canada: 
I have grown Kellogg's Prize for three years and have 
never found its equal. R. D. Forgan, Illinois. 
This is the first year Kellogg's Prize has fruited for 
me, and I never saw a more beautiful berry or one so 
productive. You will have to look a long time before you 
find one that will equal it. J. O. Staats, Indiana. 
I fruited Kellogg's Prize last season, and it certainly 
is one of the greatest berries I ever have grown. The 
berries laid in windrows on the ground. Picked at a 
single picking in one day (and the patch had been care- 
fully picked the day but one previous) seven crates of 
16-quart size or 112 quarts of berries. The size of my 
patch is only 2 by 8 rods. Chas. Wait, Wisconsin. 
I fruited your Kellogg's Prize on my farm at Green 
Bay last year. After coming through the worst spring 
in years, this variety yielded an immense crop of fine 
berries, beating all other varieties. I am, therefore, 
anxious to test your other three leaders. If they equal 
your Kellogg's Prize, you certainly have four wonderful 
varieties. W. P. Schuldes, Wisconsin. 
gating Varteties 
'pHERB are both sexes in plant life just as there 
* are in animal life, and for this reason care 
should be exercised in setting different varieties 
so that the female or pistillate varieties (which 
are indicated in this book and on the label of each 
bunch of plants, with the letter "P"), will be 
properly mated or poUenized with male or bisex- 
ual varieties (indicated with the letter "B"). 
We wish to make it plain that all male or bisex- 
ual varieties have both male and female organs 
and are self-pollenizing, but the pistillate or fe- 
male varieties have only female organs in their 
blossoms, and for this reason, they should be set 
in rows between rows of male or bisexual varie- 
ties. For example, Kellogg's Prize is a pistillate 
variety and never should be set by itself, but 
should be set in rows between rows of such bi- 
sexual varieties as Dr. Burrill and Magic Gem. 
This places Kellogg's Prize between an early and 
a late bisexual, which insures perfect polleniza- 
tion, and which, in turn insures a large crop of 
perfectly formed berries. Any other early and 
late bisexual varieties will properly mate Kel- 
logg's Prizfe. The same is true of any other pis- 
tillate variety. Even if male or bisexual varie- 
ties are set exclusively, it is to the grower's 
profit to set several varities in the same field or 
garden, as this insures an interchange of pollen 
between varieties, which we have learned through 
our own experience, is very beneficial. One of 
the duties of our Service Department is to guard 
our customers' interest on this point. Each or- 
Pase Thirty-three 
