KELLOGG THOROUGHBREDS IN A PEACH ORCHARD 
IN a letter received from Mrs. T. P. Turner of Utica, Illinois, enclosing the photograph from which the above illustration is 
made, she says: "This is a picture of my Thoroughbred Pedigree plants set in the spring of 1909 in my peach orchard. This 
is the fourth year I have grown Kellogg strawberry plants with grand results. The picture was taken September 27th, 1909." 
methods. Such a system of work must, in 
the nature of things, take the place of pre- 
vious methods of working the strawberry. 
I have worked in the berry business for sev- 
eral seasons past, and can plainly see where 
the breeding comes in as I look over our 
patch of Kellogg Thoroughbreds. 
"Wm. C. Cufton." 
What One "Drummer" Did 
PEOPLE in all walks of life are members 
of the great Kellogg Thoroughbred fam- 
ily, and it doesn't seem to make much 
difference what their occupation, they are 
always enthusiastic about the strawberry and 
their work. Edmond C. Tucker, a traveling 
representative of one of the great thread 
manufacturing companies, writes us as fol- 
lows: 
"It has been my pleasure to read the pages 
of your 'Great Crops of Strawberries.' Some 
of the testimonials of the big results obtained 
from your plants I confess I doubted, for 
they left a fish-story taste in my mind. Well, 
last year it became necessary to move a 
twelve-foot-square woodshed up close to my 
house, and the spot it was moved from looked 
bare, for our back-yard garden is the place 
in which I get my recreation and rest when 
at home. On this plot I set out some of your 
plants — enough to cover the space; gave them 
the care suggested in your book, and say, 
the results were wonderful, for we surely 
did gather thirty-eight quarts of great big 
berries, the finest ever, from this little seem- 
ingly worthless spot. No josh about this 
story," 
Reports on Varieties 
WE are always glad to receive reports 
from our customers concerning the 
performance of varieties of plants 
purchased from us, and are especially in- 
debted to W. H. C. Openshaw of Atco, New 
Jersey, for the following information: 
"I cannot help writing to you to say how 
greatly I appreciate the habit of your new 
strawberry, the Early Ozark, To me it seems 
an ideal plant, the runners being extra strong, 
with short joints and set closely in the bed. 
The foliage is dark and leathery, and I be- 
lieve will never rust or mildew. From one 
