An Income for Life from Bass Pecans. 
Here’s a Crop that Brings in the Cream 
T HERE is nothing like having strawberries growing about the home for pleasure 
and PROFIT. Besides home use and the market for strawberry preserves, the 
sale of strawberries themselves is enormous. Whole communities have been built by 
their profits. On one acre, an Arkansas man made $422.80 net. One farmer made more 
than $5,000 net on 17 acres. A Mississippi county sold $80,000 worth of berries from 
140 acres, netting each farmer an average of $571 per acre. And so on. 
Grow berries for your own use or for market. Set out 16 to 18 inches apart in 3Ms 
foot rows. It w r ill require about 7,500 plants per acre—and will pay you to follow these 
planting instructions. Ours are healthy plants with good established root systems. We 
ship plants from October 15th to April 1st, from our grower in Tennessee or Arkansas. 
The New Blakemore Strawberry 
This is a new berry that has been recommended highly by the Department of 
Agriculture at Washington, D. C. It is claimed that ninety per cent of the fruit will run 
as No. l’s. The Blakemore is firm, well colored, deliciously flavored—very productive 
and marketable fruit. 
Mastodon Improved Klondike 
EVERBEARING. This is the finest ever- 
bearing strawberry. New large fall-bearing 
berry. Mammoth berries. Eighteen of the 
larger ones fill a quart. Big strong plants. 
Firm berries, highly flavored, very sweet. 
Most productive and profitable of all ever- 
bearers. We recommend them above all 
everbearers. 
This variety is planted more in the 
southwest than any one variety grown to¬ 
day. Season is second early, and the Im¬ 
proved Klondike is bred up and is more 
productive than the old original Klondike. 
KS- 
POST PAID 
££• EXPRESS COLLECT “Si 
25 
50 
100 
250 
500 
1000 
5,000 
10,000 
Imp. Klondike 
.$ .60 
$ .75 
$1.25 
$1.50 
$2.50 
$ 3.50 
$13.50 
$ 25.00 
Blakemore . 
.75 
1.00 
2.00 
3.00 
5.00 
9.00 
40.00 
75.00 
Mastodon . 
. 1.00 
1.75 
3.00 
4.00 
7.50 
15.00 
65.00 
125.00 
Youngberries 
H ERE’S a unique berry that is becoming most popular. It is a cross between a Logan¬ 
berry and a Dewberry. This berry is remarkable for its dessert, beverage, preserv¬ 
ing and cooking qualities. Fruit is large, deep wine-color, sweet, juicy. The plants are 
vigorous, propagate freely and resist disease. The U. S. Department of Agriculture 
recommends this variety. Keep up with the times and plant Youngberries for the in- 
creasing xxiarket. We grow our own Youngberries for our customers. 
Single lots. 
.25c 
each 
50 plants . 
.15c 
each 
10 plants . 
••<}m- 
.20c 
each 
l<>- 
100 plants .. 
..An- 
.10c 
each 
—1<>- 
“/ received the trees. They came well wrapped, in fact, I’ve never seen trees and plants 
better wrapped and preserved than the ones you shipped me.” 
—RAYMOND L. ROACH, SARDIS, MISS. 
24 
