40 
GREEN’S NURSERY COMPANY, ROCHESTER, N. Y. 
-STRAWBERRY PLANTS- 
The strawberry is truly the “Poor man’s berry.” Planted between the rows of trees in an orchard, strawberry 
plants will pay the expense of bringing the orchard into fruiting and in most cases net a good profit besides. In one 
short year after planting, strawberries come into full fruiting, returning the capital invested and a very liberal profit 
in cash besides. 
At our recent exhibit at Syracuse State Fair, we observed a fruit grower standing in front of one of our signs, which 
read, “A patron writes us that he has made $590.00 per acre from strawberries.” We thought by the expression on 
his face 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 right along. 
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-around kinds. All of them are perfect flowering, and do not need 
another variety planted with them except the Bissel. 
Swppfhpart (Perfect flowering.) A seedling of 
-— the noted Corsican. It is of beautiful, 
bright carmine red, handsome in color as the most beautiful 
rose. It is solid in flesh and a long keeper. It is the best 
keeping berry we have ever seen, and must become a good 
shipper on account of its firmness of flesh and ability to 
stand up under hard usage. It is the earliest berry to ripen 
at Green’s Fruit Farm, being earlier than Senator Dunlap. 
Prices of Sweetheart, layer plants, 75c. per 10; $2.00 
per 100; $12.00 per 1,000. 
Bissel Strawberry ™ s u is a ne w variety which 
-—• has been carefully tested at 
Green’s Fruit Farm. It must be planted near a row of 
another variety that is perfect in blossom or it will not 
yield its full average crop, though even then it will bear 
fruit. Price of Bissel, layer plants, 25c. per 10; $1.00 
per 100; $5.00 per 1,000. 
Senator Dunlap. (Perfect flowering.) A 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. 
Prices of Senator Dunlap, layer plants, 25c. per 10; 
$1.00 per 100; $5.00 per 1,000, 
Green’s New Strawberry Collection 
25 Sweetheart 25 Senator Dunlap 
50 Corsican 
Special Price $1.20 (Sold elsewhere $2.50) 
This collection can be sent by parcel post, postage 
prepaid, for 20 cents additional. 
Corsican.. (Perfect flowering.) Biggest berry on 
--— earth. This is C. A. Green’s favorite straw¬ 
berry. It is the biggest, the brightest and best in color; 
a great yielder and producer. The foliage is exceedingly 
vigorous and leathery, resisting fungus, drought, weeds, and 
even neglect of cultivation. Prices of Corsican, layer 
plants, 25c. per 10; $1.00 per 100; $5.00 per 1,000. 
PARCEL POST.—Strawberry plants can be sent by 
parcel post, postage prepaid, for cent per plant additional 
to cover postage and extra packing. 
Superb. Everbearing. (Perfect flowering.) This is 
—-- considered the best of the fall or everbearing 
varieties. It is large in size, very attractive in form and 
color, and immensely productive. If planted in the early 
spring with the blossoms kept off until midseason and until 
about four weeks before ripe fruit is wanted, a crop of fruit 
can be had the same season the plants are set. The following 
spring this variety will produce a crop of fruit the same as 
any other variety and then will produce more fruit the 
following fall. 
One of the large strawberry growers in this section wrote 
us on August 15, 1916, as follows: “Last fall we picked 
170 bushels of Superb berries, a large part of which we sold 
around 20 cents a quart wholesale. These same plants 
bore an immense crop this past spring and are now fruiting 
and look as though they would fruit until they froze.” 
Prices of Superb layer plants, $1.00 per 10; $3.00 
per 100. 
FALL AND SUMMER PLANTING 
We receive a lot of inquiries for strawberry plants for 
setting in the summer and fall. We believe as a rule straw¬ 
berries planted in the summer and fall do not give satis¬ 
faction unless pot-grown plants are set, and these plants 
are so expensive to produce that we do not grow them any 
more. We recommend planting strawberries in the spring. 
IMPORTANT.—Strawberries are too perishable to ship 
by freight, so if you wash your trees sent by freight and 
your order calls for some strawberries, please include J4 
cent extra for each plant ordered and we will send to you 
by parcel post, postage prepaid. 
Children on our Fruit Farm eating Corsican Strawberries 
