GREAT CROPS OF STRAWBERRIES AND HOW TO GROW THEM 
R M. Kellogg Co., Three Rivers, Mich. 
37 
F. E. BEATTY'S HOME GARDEN 
IN this garden fifteen varieties of strawberries are Brewing. This picture suegests how very beautiful a family garden may 
be made by observing a little care. This piece of ground by actual measurement is 3 x 17 rods, and it contains a complete 
assortment of vegetables, several kinds of bush fruits, grapes, plums, cherries, and young apple trees, besides many beautiful 
varieties of roses grown as a border. A well-kept garden such as this not only adds cash value to a home, but affords untold 
pleasure and fresh fruit and vegetables in abundance. The enjoyment derived from this kind of work is entirely beyond estimate. 
the high vitality of our plants, and certainly 
must be reassuring to those who have not 
had opportunity to test our Thoroughbreds 
on their own account. We may say in this 
connection that we never have grown plants 
of higher quality than those we offer to our 
patrons this season. 
Send Us Photographs 
WE should like to have you send us a 
clean clear-cut photograph of your 
strawberry field or patch, no matter 
how large or how small the area. We should 
like also some statement of your success with 
strawberry plants to accompany photograph, 
and to have the view represent the plants 
when growing. Our purpose is to make a 
selection from the very best photographs of 
our Thoroughbred strawberry plants as 
grown by patrons for our 1912 book. Pho- 
tograph should be in our hands not later 
than July 15, 1911. 
Kellogg's Fruit the Finest 
LAST year you sent me 200 plants consist- 
ing of eight different varieties," writes 
Mrs. J. Charles Wilson of Belchertown, 
Massachusetts, June 24, 1910, "and I trans- 
planted them myself in May, 1909. Now the 
vines are loaded with fruit and the berries 
are the very largest, handsomest and finest 
I have ever had, and I have eaten berries 
from Maine to California. Everyone who has 
eaten or seen them says they are unsurpassed. 
The varieties were: Pride of Michigan, Glen 
Mary, Wm. Belt, Senator Dunlap, Enormous, 
Brandywine, Wolverton, and, I think. Can- 
dy. Each variety has its own distinct flavor 
and I find it rather hard to choose a favor- 
ite, and hope to try all of your varieties 
some day." 
