Lady Thompson, B. (.Vlale. ) 
EARLY TO LATE. Hisexual. A medium 
large bright red berry, shaped almost like a top, 
but does not run to a point; it is just a little 
blunt, which makes it all the more beautiful. 
The seeds are laid in very 
smoothly, which gives a glossy 
effect; it has a double calyx 
that opens gr-acefully over the 
berry; the inner part is solid 
and meaty, with an exceeding- 
ly rich flavor and pink color. 
It is a splendid shipper, always 
getting to market in good sal- 
able condition. The foliage 
is an extra- tall; upright grower. 
Lady Tlioinpson with a long light green leaf, 
also extra long fruit stems 
which stand erect, holding their big berries well 
up from the ground. It is a deep rooter and 
keeps right on growing through a drouth. 
Runners are long and abundant. Plants may 
be set thirty inches apart in the row, and allowed 
to form in the double-hedge system 
What $3 Worth of Plants Did 
IN the spring of 1905 R. H. Kimball of Goffs 
Falls, N. H., bought $3 worth of Kellogg 
plants. This is what he says they did for him 
in the season of 1906: "Thestrawberry plants I 
got of you a year ago are doing well, especially 
the William Belts. That variety still (July 1) 
has lots of green berries. I have picked almost 
five bushels so far and may get two more. I 
use pine needles as a mulch and there is not a 
speck of dirt on the fruit. People think them 
great berries. I wish I had set out the whole 
garden to plants. Folks come to the house after 
them faster than they ripen, and I could sell 
twenty or thirty bushels more right here if I 
could supply them, and at good prices." 
Nick Ohmer, B. (Male.) 
MEDIUM TO LATE. Bisexual. Beau- 
tiful cone-shaped berries, large as to size, deep 
crimson as to color, rich as to flavor, and round 
as to form, this variety is one of the most at- 
tractive on our list, and is in every 
sense a wiinier. The meat is 
crimson at the outer edge of the 
circle, shading to pink at the cen- 
ter. Such a combination makes 
this variety a general favorite with 
growers, and the public never has 
been able to get enough of them, 
They keep well on the vines and 
ship well to far-away markets. 
Foliage grows tall, and has a dark 
green leaf; fruit stems extend up ^u.k Ohm-r 
through the foliage, which makes 
easy work at picking time. The bloom is large 
and rich in pollen. The runners grow long be- 
fore forming nodes, therefore plants may be set 
thirty-six inches apart in the row, forming either 
a single or double hedge row. Nick Olmier 
has been under our methods of selection for 
nine years. 
Kellogg Thoroughbreds Beat All Others 
HARRY DONALDSON , commercial st aw- 
berry grower of Pekin, 111., writing under 
date of June 24, 1906, says: "The Kellogg 
plants produced double the amount of fruit this 
season secured by any one else in this section. 
The plants tliat came from you this spring are 
doing finely; they are in all respects excellent. 
IN all my dealings I never before have had 
such fair treiitment as I have had from the 
Kellogg Company," writes A. B. Butler of 
1226 Chapline street. Wheeling W. Va. .under 
date of May 26, 1906. "Your plants are fine and 
just as you represented them to be." 
