MID-SEASON 
The Best for the 
Mid-North Berry Grower 
The Sen. Dunlap is an old standard 
variety strawberry which has been 
successfully grown for many years. 
Ft is a free plant maker, very hardy, and 
produces an enormous crop of excellent 
quality berries. 
The Dunlap is one of the most favored 
varieties in the North and Mid-North, ap¬ 
parently being very resistant to frost in¬ 
jury. Its dark red fruit ripens mid-season, 
and probably no berry yet produced equals 
it for canning and preserving. 
Its fruit is very firm, with a bright green 
cap, and slightly blunted in shape. It 
stands hot, moist weather without great 
injury. For a berry of unexcelled canning 
quality and one which produces a heavy 
yield, we suggest that you try a few of 
our good, strong Dunlap plants. As we 
have found the Dunlap and the Dr. Burrill to be one and the 
same berry, we have discontinued listing them separately. 
SEN. DUNLAP 
CHAMPION K 
A Good Early Berry 
GANDY 
The Old Standby 
The Champion K, although not as popu¬ 
lar as many mid-season and second early 
berries, is one of our best earliest varieties. 
It ripens with Excelsior, the earliest straw¬ 
berry grown, and its fruit is fully as large 
as the Klondike.- 
The fruit stem of Champion K is very 
large and the plant makes a strong, vigor¬ 
ous growth, producing an abundance of 
heavily foliaged plants. The berry is 
bright red, slightly blunted, and a good 
shipper for an early berry. 
As these berries ripen several days be¬ 
fore the Premier there is always a demand 
on the market for them. Try a few hun¬ 
dred of our Champion K and cash in on 
the local market. 
This is one of the old favorites which 
has been planted for the past thirty years, 
and according to many growers, has not 
been bettered for a late variety. 
In color, texture, and quality the Gandy 
ranks near the top. It is a good shipping 
berry and if planted with Aroma, will pro¬ 
duce a fair yield. 
The Gandy blossoms late and is seldom 
injured by frost. Its plant growth is strong 
and abundant, its foliage heavy and of a 
dark green color. To anyone who under¬ 
stands fruiting the imperfect blossoming 
berries we recommend the Gandy for a late 
variety. 
McCLINTOCK 
A New and Valuable 
Variety 
Introduced in 1932 by the Tennessee Ex¬ 
periment Station. It is said to be similar 
to Klondyke in fruit and plant characteris¬ 
tics, but valuable because of the firmness 
and attractiveness of the berry and the 
ability to maintain a good size throughout 
the season. We have not fruited it. In 
plant growth with us it is similar to Klon¬ 
dyke. 
An Actual Photo of a Block of 
Waller’s New Ground Berry 
Plants. This land was cleared 
and made ready for berries a 
year before we set it. 
No berry plant can be disease- 
free that is grown on diseased 
ground. By setting our plants 
on new ground we are sure that 
we will not grow diseased 
plants. 
