$1.00f With All Orders Amounting to $20 or More. 
13 
Dozen, $1.50; 100, $10.00; 1,000, $75.00. i strong growing plant, the individual 
Progressive (Per.)—This variety has ! plants getting to enormous propor- 
been known as Rockhill’s No. 16 and tions. It does best on clay. The fall 
is now' introduced for the first time, crop, like that of the “Superb” is 
It is a cross of the Senator Dunlap and small, but the crop in June is simply 
Pan American. The fruit and plants. immense. The flavor is salvy, un 
closely resemble the Dunlap in ap- j attractive, listless and lacks character, 
pearance. The plants produce more ' The amount of fruit picked from the 
runners and new plants than any! row's of the “Iowa" and “Productive" 
variety of fall bearing strawberry we on our farm in June of last year, was 
ijameiuiij me I'aii a ueirics at 1... .J. raiiiiei *> piacc, v.;cvouer 
Cut from L. J. Farmer's Book, ’’Farmer on the Strawberry.” 
are familiar w’ith. We have had it on 
trial for two seasons. The berries are 
just about the size and color of the 
Dunlap and produced in great abund¬ 
ance. It produces good paying crops 
in the fall of both the first and second 
years. During the past season w'e re¬ 
moved the blossoms once in May from 
plants that had been set the year be¬ 
fore and these plants begun fruiting in 
July and lasted until snow’ came. The 
amount of fruit that w’e picked from 
500 plants set in the spring of 1911, the 
past summer and fall, w'as almost be¬ 
yond comprehension. It has a serious 
fault in that it lacks flavor. It is the 
“Ben Davis” among fall bearing straw¬ 
berries. Price of plants: Dozen, $1.50; 
100, $10.00; 1,000, $75.00. 
Iowa (Per.)—This is a very sturdy. 
simply wonderful. Dozen, $1.50; lOn, 
$10.00; 1,000, $75.00. 
Pan American (Per.)—This is the 
first fall beariirg straw'berry of Amer¬ 
ican origin and the parent of all other 
valuable varieties that bear in the fall. 
It is a sport from the old Bismark 
straw'berry and was found growing by 
Samuel Cooper in 1899. It is fairly 
productive, but a poor plant grow’er 
and inclined to mildew’ of foliage. We 
would not think of planting it if we 
could get plants of the improved 
varieties named above. Dozen, $1.00; 
100, $6.00; 1,000, $50.00. 
Autumn (Imp.)—A seedling of the 
Pan American w'hich has been used to 
I make crosses with Pan American and 
^ other varieties to produce improved 
I varieties of fall bearing strawberries. 
