SOUTH MICHIGAN NURSERY, New Buffalo, Mich. 
GEORGE STROMER 
Q ARDEN SUCCESS 
Garden success depends a whole lot on where 
you get your plants and how you take care of 
them after you receive them and plan" them. It 
is always wise to buy Nursery Stock from an old 
established concern. There are a lot of so-called 
nurseries that will spring up every year, and last 
about one year, and then are never heard of 
again. To buy from those fellows would be like 
buying an obsolete automobile. They will be 
gone when you need them. The South Michigan 
Nursery is in the business to stay. We are in it 
because we know how f o grow good plants and 
how to handle them, and because we like it. We 
don’t just buy our plants and trees and sell them. 
We grow them here, and know what they are 
before we offer them to you to set in your gar¬ 
den or orchard. 
Our Quarantee 
We guarantee every plant sold by us 
to be first class in every respect, free 
from any injurious diseases or insect, 
and true to name, and hold ourselves 
ready, upon proper proof, to refund or 
replace any that prove otherwise. It is 
mutually agreed between ourselves and 
the customers that we shall not be liable 
for a greeter sum than the amount paid 
us for the plants. Not responsible for 
crop damaged by weather, fire or floods. 
We reserve the right to return money in 
case of shortage. 
V 
We wish to thank each and every one of our good friends and customers who have fa¬ 
vored us with their order in the pas', and we hope you will all remember us again this 
spring when you make out your order for plants and trees. 
Wins $20.00 Prize and Makes $44.10 from 
300 of Stromer’s Double Yield Mastodon. 
Read Mr. Atkins’ Letter below.. . 
Jefferson, Mass. 
My dear Mr. Stromer: 
I am sending my report on the 
Strawberry plants I purchased from 
you, which I planted, 300 double 
yield Mastodons. They were as good 
plants as I have ever seen. I picked 
my first berries the first week of 
August. I picked every other day 
until the 15th of October. My rec¬ 
ord shows a picking of 147 quarts 
of which I sold 93 quarts at 30 
cents a quart. My plants and ber¬ 
ries were the talk of the town. 
Yours truly, 
CHESTER C. ATKINS. 
Correct Planting 
Booklet 
Forty-eight pages of valuable infor¬ 
mation on planting, pruning and gen¬ 
eral care of plants, shrubs, trees, etc. 
Everyone interested in plants should 
have this book. Supply limited. 
PRICE 25c. 
If Included 
With Order— 
15c 
Myatt’s 
Linnaeus 
Rhubarb. 
Myatt’s Linnaeus Rhubarb 
This variety is an early, tender, fast growing kind, with a mild, 
sub-acid flavor, and is not tough and stringy like most sorts. 
Plant some of this Rhubarb this spring, and make some early 
money. We are offering select', No. 1 roots at a very low price. 
Prices: 10c each; 6 for 40c; 10 for 60c, prepaid. 
Washington Asparagus 
There is no variety of Asparagus as good as Washington, and 
whether you are growing for home use only or for market, you 
cannot afford to grow any other. This wonderful new Asparagus 
was developed and introduced by the United States Department 
of Agriculture, and although it is just a recent introduction, it 
has become famous the country over. 
Growers everywhere are disregarding all other varieties in 
favor of the famous Washington, because it is earlier, the stalks 
are larger, more tender, more productive than any other variety, 
and last bu' not least, WASHINGTON IS IMMUNE FROM 
RUST, which means that one planting will produce profitable 
crops for many years. Fine, large roots, Prices: 
2-year-old, 25 for #1.00; 50 for #1.75; 100 for #2.75; 500 for 
# 8 . 00 . 
1-year-old, 25 for 50c; 50 for 90c; 100 for #1.40; 500 for 
#4.00; 1000 for #7.00. 
Washington Asparagus. 
