RM. KELLOGG COMPANY THREE RIVERS, MICH. 
WARFIELD, ONE OF THE GREATEST FAVORITES 
This variety is n favorite known from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from the Gulf to Hudson Bay. and combines so many 
excellent qualities that it is impossible to name them all. Generous in size, of beautiful shape, with dark-red exterior that does 
not fade or become dull after nicking and cnnninn, it has become one of the most popular of all strawberries for canning, but 
it is not limited to this field, for it is a universal favorite as a table berry. Warfield is an early variety, has an extraordinarily 
long fruiting season, and yields a largo picking every day for several weeks. 
Kellogg Photographs 
EVERY illustration .shown in this book is made 
from an actual photograph. The photog- 
rapher's camera alwa\s shows an object just 
as it is, and this is llie reason we use photo-engrav- 
ings in illustrating this book instead of pen drawings 
and exaggerated pictures. It is an easy matter for 
an artist to draw a picture of a perfectly formed 
strawberry or strawberry plant loaded with per- 
fectly formed berries, but the lens of a camera 
cannot change the form of a strawberry, neither 
can it show more strawberries on a hill than are 
actually there. In fact, it is impossible to photo- 
graph a strawberry plant in fruit and show all 
the berries on the plant, because there are as many 
berries on the opposite side of the plant as on the 
side which is pliotograplied. Therefore, instead 
of photo-engravings exaggerating, the tendency 
is the other way, and they really fail to do justice 
to the fruit. 
There is another thing that the camera seems 
unable to do, and that is to make photographs 
equal to our field scenes. For instance, we now 
have 120 acres covered by overhead irrigation, 
and we have been unable to photograph such a 
large area and show the magnitude and reproduce 
our fields just as they are. Everyone who visits 
our farm declares that we never have shown in 
our book any pictures that do our farm justice. 
They say everything is better than we represent 
it to be — either by illustration or description. 
Agricultural colleges and the publishers of leading 
magazines continually are writing us for photo- 
graphs for use in illustrating bidletins, text-books 
and magazines, because they know our photographs 
lire genuine. We do not believe in showing imag- 
inary pictures in order to deceive, any more than 
we believe in giving imaginary or day-dream 
cultural methods in order to misguide the grower; 
therefore, you may rest assured that every picture 
in this book is real and that the cultural methods 
and instructions are the result of thirty-three years 
of strawberry experience. 
Send Us Photographs 
We invite our patrons who take pride in their 
strawberry plots to send us clean, clear-cut photo- 
graphs of their strawberry fields, no matter how 
large or how small the area. We should like, also, 
some statement of your success with strawberry 
plants to accompany the photograph, and to have 
the view represent our 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 1919 book. Photo- 
graphs shoidd be in our hands not later than 
October 1, 1918. 
A Saving That Proved a Loss 
Gentlemen: — One year ago, I bought some 
Kellogg Pedigree Plants. I followed your directions 
for hill culture and never saw a bigger yield or 
finer berries than those plants produced for me. 
Right beside your plants, I set some other plants 
which the grower recommended as "just as good." 
These "just as good" plants were given just the 
same care and attention as the Kellogg Pedigree 
Plants but did not produce enough berries to pay 
for the cost of setting them, much less the work 
and rent of ground. This experience has t horoughly 
convinced me that it pays to set none but Kellogg 
Pedigree Plants, and I shall want more of them 
next spring. T. E. Huston, Missouri. 
-5J- 
