GREEN’S QUALITY TREES, ROCHESTER, N. Y. 
STRAWBERRY PLANTS 
Corsican Strawberry. (Perfect flowering.) Mid- 
--—--— season. Biggest berry on 
earth. This is C. A. Green’s favorite strawberry. It is the 
biggest, the brightest and best in color; a great yielderand 
producer. The foliage is exceedingly vigorous and leathery, 
resisting fungus, drought, weeds, and even neglect of cultiva¬ 
tion. At our exhibit at New York State Fair, a fruit grower 
stood in front of our sign, which read, "A patron writes us 
that he has made $590.00 per acre from strawberries." We 
thought that possibly he thought this was an exaggeration, 
but in reply to our inquiry to that effect, he stated that he 
did not think we told half the story and that he was making 
$1,000.00 per acre from his strawberries. There are thousands 
of varieties of strawberries; we only name a few of the very 
selected ones which have been fully tried out and tested and 
found to be the best. All of them are perfect flowering, and do 
not need another variety planted with them. 
IMPORTANT. — Strawberries are too perishable to ship 
by freight. 
In Planting for the Home, Do Not Omit the Small 
Fruits 
The strawberry is the poor man’s berry. He who has but 
a small village lot can make more money by growing straw¬ 
berries there for sale than by devoting the land to any other 
purpose. He who has several acres on a farm cannot do better 
than to plant strawberries to supply his immediate neighbors, 
or villages ten to fifteen miles away, also the farmers. 
Green’s Nursery Company: Received the trees and they 
were as fine and as-good as some I have paid a much higher 
price for and so well packed. The Corsican strawberry 
plants were the largest I have ever seen. If berries are any- 
thing like the plants I shall want more. Sherman U. Bowers, 
Falls City, Nebraska, April 17, 1917. 
Senator Dunlap Strawberry. .(Perfe^flower- 
heavy cropper of best quality berries with clean, healthy 
foliage which has no tendency to rust. Berries are very 
large. Plants of this variety must not be expected as large as 
Corsican plants, as it is a lighter grower. 
FALL AND SUMMER PLANTING 
We receive a lot of inquiries for strawberry plants for set¬ 
ting in the summer and fall. As a rule, strawberries planted 
in summer and fall do not give satisfaction unless pot-grown 
plants are set, and these plants are so expensive to produce 
that we do not grow them any more. We recommend plant¬ 
ing strawberries in the spring. 
PLANT MORE SMALL FRUITS 
Less plantations of small fruits have been made during 
the last few years than formerly. The result is that prices of 
red and black raspberries, blackberries, strawberries and 
other small fruits have greatly increased all over the country. 
The prices for these berries now make it exceedingly profitable 
to produce them. The truth is, there are not enough grown 
to supply the demand fully. Bear in mind that the canning 
houses are consuming a large quantity of small fruits every 
year. They are using far more than in past years for jams, 
marmalades, for canning and for fruit juices. Another new 
source of consumption of small fruits is in the great factories 
that manufacture fruit syrup for soda fountains. While 
these new sources enter the field as competitors in purchasing 
small fruits, the supply from families who patronize the 
groceries continues. 
Those who have planted or are about to plant an orchard 
may well consider the importance of planting small fruits 
between the rows of young trees or in a plantation by them¬ 
selves. These small fruits will come quickly into bearing and 
give the planter much needed revenue while he is waiting 
for his orchard to come into bearing. Small fruits are the 
poor man’s berries. The poor man can secure ready money 
from a little patch of strawberries in his garden. 
For Prices on All Strawberries See First Pages of Catalog 
