K.M.Kellogg's Great Crops of <^ 
yNDER dale of July 29, 1907, Mr. Bolt writes 
use Kellogg plants." 
the same plan should be followed as is done in 
cultivating young plants. Cultivation and hoeing 
should be continued until early fall. Then keep 
the runners in check and the weeds and grass 
under control and your second crop will be 
assured. 
Some Things We Do Not Do 
DLEASE remember that the R. M. Kellogg 
Company does not sell plants for fall set- 
ting. Our shipping season is confined to from six 
to eight weeks in the spring — from the earliest 
moment we can get to the plants in March or 
April, to the latest day the season permits the 
shipment of plants with safety — depending on 
the season. After our shipping season is closed 
we cannot ship to anybody under any circum- 
stance. Another thing we do not do is to deal 
in potted plants. This in answer to a countless 
number of inquiries received each season. 
The Opportunity in Strawberries 
V/OUNG MAN, are you seeking a vocation 
in life with the notion in your mind that all 
the places appear to be already filled? Why do 
you go about, hat in hand, asking other men for 
a job, when there opens widely to you such a 
door to opportunity and success as the strawberry 
field? 
We wish you might see the letters we get 
from one Kansas high-school boy who is earning 
the money which is to take him through a univer- 
sity course by growing strawberries for market! 
It's an inspiration to know of his success and to 
know that it is being achieved by good hard faith- 
ful work — the sort of an experience that builds 
up a manly man and makes him appreciate the 
meaning and value of an education and how best 
to use it in after life. 
BERRY FIELD OF C. S. BOLT, BANCROFT, MICH. 
1 send you herewith photograph of my berry field. 
always 
This boy discovered the opportunity and laid 
hold upon it. Success has crowned his work. 
What he has done you can do if you will to do 
it. And you will find yourself in a position of 
independence by following this line of work more 
quickly and certainly than by taking any other 
course we could suggest. 
Near every good market lies fertile land that 
is unused. If it is for sale at a fair price and 
one can do so, it would be better to buy; if it 
may not be purchased, it may be leased for a 
term of years at a moderate rental. Usually a 
bright man who has the confidence of his neigh- 
bors will be able to get hold of the land on 
which to develop a strawberry farm. Having 
done so, a strong, clear-headed m.an will be able 
to make a start even though he have to work for 
others a part of the time while he is getting things 
under way. It's all in the willing to do, and if 
one will read up a little on strawberry growing, 
get first-class plants, set them out in first-class 
soil and give them first-class treatment, success is 
as certain as that the sun will rise on the mor- 
row. 
A demand awaits every fancy berry you can 
produce and at a high price. Don't bother to 
grow "the other kind" — it isn't worth while. 
Follow the lines suggested here as circumstances 
require, and you will have a bank account and 
an independent enterprise of your own almost 
before you know it. 
Chickens and Strawberries 
nnHERE are many reasons wjay the poultry- 
man should combine strawberry growing 
with his animal industry, for the combination is 
a perfect one in every way and completes a 
year-round source of revenue. Take, for in- 
22 
