GREAT CROPS OF STRAWBERRIES AND HOW TO GROW THEM 31 
R. M. Kellogg Co., Three Rivers, Mich. 
A Dish of Stevens' Late Champion 
THIS engraving is an exact reproduction of a photograph, and suggests the large size and fine appearance of the 
berries produced by this noble late variety. The productiveness, large size, fine quality and lateness of Stevens' 
Late Champion make it one of great profit to the commercial grower and a favorite for the family garden. 
many of them have found it profitable enough 
to withdraw from all other lines of work and 
engage wholly in the pursuit of growing high- 
grade strawberries for the market. The work 
is healthful, refined, inspiring, profitable. It 
calls for little manual labor that is beyond 
the physical strength of delicate women, and 
wherever heavy work is necessary men may 
be employed to do it. The life is in the open, 
and the strawberry season is the most charm- 
ing of all seasons. It requires only energy, 
intelligence and a certain degree of skill in 
growing the fruit, and good common sense 
in marketing it, to insure success to any 
woman who enters upon this work. We have 
ample reason to believe that in no other di- 
A Six-Wheel Marking Device 
Sled-Runner Marking Device 
THREE ninnera made from 2x4 scantling about two feet 
long and spiked to 1x4 boards attached to shafts, com- 
pletes tlie above device, which is one of the simplest and 
best markers for small growers of which we know. 
We send no plants to anyone anywhere C. O. D., nor do we ship plants until the full amount of their cost is in our hands. 
SIX iron wheels placed upon a section of gas-pipe to 
which are attached gas-pipe shafts. Wheels are held in 
place on the gas-pipe by lugs or heavy washers, and these 
are fastened to the gas-pipe by set screws. liy loosening 
the screws the spaces between wheels may be gauged to 
any desired width. 
