PLANTS, BERRIES, PROFITS 
STRAWBERRIES YOUNGBERRY 
DEWBERRIES BOYSENBERRY 
Waller Bros. Quality Plants 
Have No Superior 
It is not by accident that WALLER BROS, 
quality plants are the most dependable plants 
that can be bought. They are selected, grown, 
packed and shipped according to the most ap¬ 
proved scientific methods. Here are a few of 
the reasons why our customers rely upon 
WALLER BROS, quality berry plants: 
Every “mother” plant that we set in our 
fields is carefully hand selected by an expert. 
All stunted, undersized, shriveled, or other¬ 
wise inferior plants are culled and immedi¬ 
ately destroyed. Sometimes one bad plant 
can disease a whole plot. 
Our plants are carefully and continuously 
cultivated during the growing season. As we 
grow every strawberry plant we 
sell, we know that these plants 
have received proper care while in 
the field. 
Our plants are dug by skilled 
workers under the supervision of a 
trained man. There are no broken 
roots, split crowns or other digging 
defects in our plants. 
Upon entering our packing shed 
our plants are inspected, both by 
our inspector and by a state inspec¬ 
tor, counted, tied in bundles of 
twenty-six (sold as twenty-five), 
and labeled. So carefully are our 
plants culled and inspected that we 
guarantee them to pass inspection 
in any state by an authorized in¬ 
spector. 
Our plants are shipped the same 
day they are dug in crates especial¬ 
ly designed to provide them with 
ample moisture and ventilation. 
Not only this, the roots of all 
WALLER BROS, plants are pack¬ 
WALLER’S NEWGROUND 
PLANT 
ed in damp moss to assure you that they will 
not be dried or shriveled when you get them. 
Plants so grown, culled, packed, and ship¬ 
ped must be right. 
Who Pays the Bill? 
When you set inferior plants bought from 
a fly-by-night dealer because they can under¬ 
sell by ten cents on the thousand a reliable 
plant grower—Who Pays the Bill? When the 
cost of settipg, cultivation, fertilizer, and the 
use of the land to grow these inferior plants 
is considered—How Much Money Have You 
Saved? When spring comes and the berries 
are ready to harvest—Have You Made Any 
Profit Off These Cheap Plants? 
It costs less to fertilize and cultivate good berry 
plants because their strong system of disease-free 
roots are ready to grow when you get them. They 
do not have to be cajoled and pampered by special 
plowing and fertilizing. Set them on 
good land and give them proper care and 
cultivation—the plants will do the rest. 
Your yield will repay you ten-fold. 
A SIMPLE PROBLEM 
IN ARITHMETIC 
Problem : If you can save ten cents on 
the thousand by buying cheap plants 
and you are setting ten acres of ber¬ 
ries, 5,000 plants to the acre, how 
much have you saved on the plants? 
Further, if the cheap plants you 
set, which never give the satisfac¬ 
tion that well grown plants give, 
yield only half as much as the qual¬ 
ity plants, have you profited or lost 
by setting cheap plants? 
Again, if it cost twenty per cent 
more to fertilize and cultivate cheap 
plants (counting the cost of cultiva¬ 
tion at $10 to the acre) how much 
have you lost by setting cheap 
plants? 
Answer: Dependable quality plants are 
the cheapest plants that you can set. 
WALLER quality plants are the 
best yield insurance that your money 
can buy. 
A NEW VARIETY 
DORSETT strawberry, like its mate the Fairfax, 
has so many desirable characteristics to its credit 
that the two varieties together set a new standard 
in quality strawberries. Vigorous plant growth, 
firm rich red berries of tasty dessert quality, high 
yielder of fancy fruit, and almost a sure cropper— 
these are some of the qualities which make Dorsett 
an outstanding variety. 
This new berry is a cross between the Royal 
Sovereign (a popular English variety) and Premier 
made in 1923 by the United States Department of 
Agriculture. Although the Dorsett has not been 
given trial over as wide a range of conditions as has 
the Bellmar, wherever tried it has been found to 
excel almost every other early berry in quality, and 
in many sections it promises to be a serious con¬ 
tender for commercial prominence. So rich in flavor 
is this new variety, and so high in yield, many 
prominent berry growers along the eastern coast 
are turning away from the favored Premier to the 
newer Dorsett. 
In color and appearance the Dorsett is rather 
distinctive. This berry is very light red in color, 
of a brilliant hue, and it holds this color as well 
or better than the Blakemore. As wholesale market 
buyers are accustomed to considering dark color as 
a definite sign of over-ripeness, the light color of 
Dorsett will be a big advantage. 
The calyx of the Dorsett berry is bright green, 
the size of the berry unusually large, and its shape 
very attractive. 
