^^'fH^^y Strawberries ^HovTo Gyow^THEM ^ 
R. M. KELLOGG CO.'S NEW UP-TO-DATE OFFICE 
'J'HIS illustration shows the new brick office of the Kellogg Company. The building is particularly arranged to 
accommodate the business of the company, and its main office room is pronounced to be one of the finest in 
Mictiigan. 1 he lirst and second stories only are shown here. The further side rests on a level with the itreet so 
that a team may be driven into the mailing department, from which two-horse-loads of "Great Crops of Strawberries 
and How to Grow Them are sent to the postoffice daily during the busy season. 
successful, money making strawberry grower — 
when you know how. A knowledge of nature's 
simple ways and gumption are the chief requi- 
sites; and we shall tell you not only how to 
grow big crops of fancy berries, but how to get 
big prices for them and build up a reputation for 
quality that will keep your berries in constant 
and growing demand. And we purpose telling 
it in language so plain that any one can take up 
the work with perfect assurance of winning out. 
Strawberry growing is not only a profitable 
business — it is a delightfully pleasant occupa- 
tion as well. But viewed from the profit side 
alone, experience has demonstrated beyond the 
shadow of a doubt that more money may be 
realized from one acre of land when set to well- 
developed strawberry plants than from any other 
line of production. And if any strawberry 
grower is finding his work unprofitable something 
is wrong with his way of doing things. Either 
he is trying to do business with what he is 
pleased to call economy, and using an inferior 
quality of plants, or he is neglecting to give his 
plants such intelligent treatment as success de- 
mands. 
There is a vast difference between economy 
and penuriousness, and nowhere else may it be 
more clearly seen than in strawberry production. 
OUR MAILING DEPARTMENT GETTING OUT ITS DAILY BUDGET 
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