A FIELD OF HEARTS OF GOLD 
'TPHE above photo-engraving shows a portion of a twenty-five acre field of Hearts of Gold cantaloupes grown at 
, . Three Rivers, Michigan. It would be impossible to find a more vigorous and more perfect field of cantaloupes. 
It IS from just such fields as the one shown here that we secure the seed which we are offering to our customers. 
With this seed you can have a field fully as beautiful and profitable as the one shown here. The seed that produced 
this beautiful field was not planted until early June, and the first melons were picked the latter part of August 
and daily pickings were made until the 9th of October. Remember, that like begets like and that the quality of 
seed you plant will determine the quality and quantity of melons you will harvest. 
prepaid to any town in the United States. We 
have only a hmited supply of this seed and can 
fill orders as long as our supply lasts. Please or- 
der as early as possible and include full payment 
with order. 
Kellogg's Combined Cantaloupe 
and Strawberry Garden 
■lATILL supply your entire family with all the 
delicious strawberries and Hearts of Gold 
cantaloupes they can consume throughout the 
entire season and will give a big cash profit be- 
sides. This Garden is composed of the following: 
100 hills Hearts of Gold cantaloupes - - $1.00 
50 hills early strawberries - - - - .75 
50 hills mid-season strawberries - - .75 
50 hills late strawberries - . - . i.oo 
50 hills everbearers (Superb) - - - 1.55 
50 hills everbearers (Progressive) - - 1.55 
25 hills Kellogg's Big Late - - - 1.00 
Actual value of this Garden - - $7.60 
Our special low price to you for this complete 
Garden is only $6.00 
The Hearts of Gold cantaloupe seed will be 
mailed to you on receipt of your order, and the 
strawberry plants will be shipped at the proper 
time for setting them in your garden. We will 
select varieties adapted to your soil and climate, 
and plants will be pruned all ready for setting as 
soon as you receive them. 
T TNDER date of June 29, 1916, Wm. R. McKown 
^ of Pennsylvania, writes us: "About two 
months ago I received from you 100 strawberry 
plants. They arrived when the ground was cov- 
ered with six or eight inches of snow, so I cleared 
off a little space and heeled them in as per your 
instructions and left them there for four days. I 
then planted them and every plant lived, and I 
now have a patch that is the envy of the neighbor- 
hood. Indeed, they are growing so fast that they 
sometimes get ahead of me, although I watch 
them very closely. As I have small space for ber- 
ries, I have until now always bought pot-grown 
plants, but no more for me, for these plants of 
yours are away ahead and are finer plants than 
some pot-grown ones I planted last August. I am 
trying to grow them strictly according to the Kel- 
logg Way, and I hope and expect to get fine re- 
sults next spring. Most of the plants have three 
or four crowns and should have lots of fruit next 
year. I thought you might be interested to know 
I am pleased with them and I shall let you know 
next year how the crop turns out. " 
Kellogg Photographs 
pVERY illustration shown in this book is made 
from an actual photograph. The photograph- 
er's camera always shows an object just as it is, 
and this is the reason we use photo-engravings in 
illustrating this book instead of pen drawings and 
exaggerated pictures. It is an easy matter for 
an artist to draw a picture of a perfectly formed 
strawberry or strawberry plant loaded with per- 
fectly formed berries, but the lens of a camera 
cannot change the form of a strawberry, neither 
can it show more strawberries on a hill than are 
actually there. In fact, it is impossible to photo- 
graph a strawberry plant in fruit and show all 
the berries on the plant, because there are as many 
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