GREAT CROPS OF STRAWBERRIES AND HOW TO GROW THEM 
R. M. Kellogg Co., Three Rivers, Mich. 
23 
An Ideal Strawberry Wagon 
THE wagon shown suggests a very important matter to the commercial strawberry grower. You will note that this 
wagon has shelves, which allows the grower to keep separate the cases containing different grades of berries. Placing 
the fruit on shelves, it may be shown to prospective buyers in a quick and satisfactory way. The wagon is equipped 
with good springs and the berries arrive at market in as good condition as they leave the field, . . . ' 
Strawberries and Bees 
npHE bee is a friend of the strawberry. She 
likes the white blossom and finds in its 
depths the nectar which she resolves into 
honey. In the securing of the sweet, her 
body is laden with the yellow pollen, and as 
she moves from bloom to bloom she scatters 
this pollen so that the pistils of the plant are 
fructified and made productive of more per- 
fect fruit and of larger quantities of fruit. 
Stevens' Late Champion and Brandy wine 
WHICH would you eat first — the banana, or the three big, luscious strawberries? Note thr Stevens' Late Champion 
on the left — isn't it a beauty? And the Brandywines to the right — they're as big as app.es. It takes the Kellogg 
strain to produce this kind. Purity and vigor are dominating qualities of our strain of these iwo noble varieties. 
Be sure and mulch your plants. Ju«t after the first hard freeze is the time. Oat straw, wheat straw, sowed corn, 
sorghum pomace, marih hay. or any similar material will serve the purpose. 
