Your Privileges as a Member of the Correspondence 
School of Strawberry Culture: 
1. Whenever difficulties arise in your strawberry work simply write us, 
explaining the nature of the trouble, and you will receive in return such infor- 
mation as shall help you over the difficulty. 
2. If you find insects working on your plants, send specimens of them to 
us in a tightly closed box, and we will tell you what the insect is, how it 
breeds, the injury it does, and the remedy or preventive. 
3. If you find anything affecting your plants in the way of leaf-spot or any- 
thing foreign to the nature of the plant, enclose some specimen leaves in your 
letter to us, explain as nearly as possible the condition of your plants and we 
will outline a simple course of treatment to prevent the spread of the trouble. 
In short, membership in this school gives you the right to ask and to expect 
an answer concerning any question that relates to the production and market- 
ing of strawberries. When writing state whether you wish a personal 
reply or to have the answer made through The Strawberry. We desire to 
give all readers the benefit of all questions asked, as others are interested in 
your problems. 
1^ ROWING strawberries has always been my 
hobby, so I am now pretty well known in 
this vicinity as "Sam Warren, the strawberry 
crank." Naturally, when I knew of your sending 
out a publication called The Strawberry I sub- 
scribed for it at once, and I can truthfully say I 
have received from its pages many times its cost, 
although I have had fifty-three years' experience 
in this branch of horticulture. It seems to me 
that to those who are just beginning in the bus- 
iness, on a small or large scale, it must be a gold 
mine," S. H. Warren, Weston, Mass. 
