THE 1937 CROP OF NEW STRAWBERRY PLANTS—UNUSUALLY FINE FOLIAGE. 
The above illustration is a field of our Strawberries photographed November 5, 1937. This is one of the many fields constituting a 
S lanting of more than 150 acres on our fertile bay-shore farms in the spring of 1937. No doubt we have one of the largest supplies of 
trawberry plants to be found in America today, grown especially for gardeners and commercial growers of Strawberries who demand the 
best. 
Buntings 9 Famed Strawberry Plants 
BIG LATE. (Imperfect). Late. Vigorous grower, 
very productive. Fine quality. Berries very 
large, rich in color with a handsome bright 
green cap that increases the beauty and selling 
price of the berries, which are very, very firm 
and will carry to market in excellent condition. 
Produces great quantities of berries which av¬ 
erage large in sue throughout the fruiting sea¬ 
son. Extensively planted in a commercial way. 
BRANDYWINE. (Perfect). Medium late. Fruit 
large and very firm, good shipping qualities, a 
very heavy cropper; it is a standard variety the 
country over. More extensively planted in the 
tropical climates; bears a heavy crop of No. 1 
fruit anywhere Strawberries will grow. You 
will like Brandywine. 
BUBACH. (Perfect). This is one of the old- 
time favorites. Plants make a good growth; 
foliage dark green, leathery type; produces an 
abundance of big red berries of medium firm¬ 
ness. Midseason. 
CAMPBELL’S EARLY. (Perfect). The earliest 
variety on our list; plants healthy with a light 
green, waxy, upright foliage. Berries beauti¬ 
ful, rich red, of large sue, which ripen per¬ 
fectly all over with no green ends. A very 
good variety to plant for table use and local 
markets. No garden should be without them. 
COOPER. (Perfect). Fruit large and of good 
quality. Plants productive. Cooper produces 
its crop early in the season, and the flavor of 
the fruit is delicious. It is grown successfully 
in all soils and climates that will produce 
Strawberries. Too soft for long distance ship¬ 
ping. 
CORSICAN, Same as New York. 
DR. BURRILL, (Perfect). Very similar to Sen¬ 
ator Dunlap. Excellent for canning and very 
delicious for table use. Blossoms are perfect 
and its long blooming season makes it good for 
planting with imperfect flowering sorts. 
GANDY. (Perfect). This is an excellent late 
variety. Does best in springy land with some 
clay in its makeup. Fruit is large, firm, and of 
fine flavor. A good long distance shipper. The 
perfect shape of the berries and the large, 
bright green caps make them very beautiful 
and attractive. A vigorous grower, making 
plants freely. 
GIBSON, (Perfect). Exactly the same as Par¬ 
sons’ Beauty. We can see no difference in 
growth of plants or fruit. 
FINE PLANTS, STRONG AND HEALTHY 
Jan. 13, 1938 
Dear Sirs: 
I bought a lot of Strawberry plants from you two years ago, and 
they were very fine plants, strong and healthy. 
I am giving you below a list of what I will need this coming 
6pring. Please reserve them for me and tell me how much they 
will be and when you will ship them. 
Yours very truly, 
(Signed) THOMAS WILSON, ; 
Belmont Farm, Perrysburg, Ohio. 
NICE PLANTS — ARRIVED IN GOOD SHAPE 
Jan. 1, 1937. 
Dear Sirs: 
The Strawberry plants we ordered frdm you came through in 
very good shape. They were nice plants and have already started 
to grow although they were put out late. 
I thank you very much for the extra plants as well as your care 
in sending what I ordered. 
Respectfully, ' 
(Signed) MINTA F. MILLER, 
R. 2, Liberal, Missouri. 
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