SEN. DUNLAP 
MID-SEASON 
The Best for the Mid-North 
Berry Grower 
The Sen. Dunlap is an old 
standard variety strawberry 
which has been successfully 
grown for many years. It is a 
free plant maker, very hardy, 
and produces an enormous crop 
of excellent quality berries. 
The Dunlap is one of the most 
favored varieties in the North 
and Mid-North, apparently being 
very resistant to frost injury. Its 
dark red fruit ripens mid-season, 
and probably no berry yet pro¬ 
duced equals it for canning and 
preserving. 
Its fruit is very firm, with a bright green cap, and slightly blunted in shape. It stands hot, moist weather 
without great injury. For a berry of unexcelled canning quality and one which produces a heavy yield, we 
suggest that you try our good, strong Dunlap plants. As we have found the Dunlap and the Dr. Burrill to be 
one and the same berry, we have discontinued listing them separately. 
Here's Proof of New Ground Plants 
CHAMPION K 
A Good Early Berry 
The Champion K, although not as popular as many mid¬ 
season and second early berries, is one of our best earliest 
varieties. It ripens with Excelsior, the earliest strawberry 
grown, and its fruit is fully as large as the Klondike. 
The fruit stem of Champion K is very large and the plant 
makes a strong, vigorous growth, producing an abundance of 
heavily foliaged plants. The berry is bright red, slightly 
blunted, and a good shipper for an early berry. 
As these berries ripen several days before the Premier 
there is always a demand on the market for them. Try a few 
hundred of our Champion K and cash in on the local market. 
CANDY 
The Old Standby 
This is one of the old favorites which has been planted 
for the past thirty years, and according to many growers, has 
not been bettered for a late variety. 
In color, texture, and quality the Gandy ranks near the 
top. It is a good shipping berry and if planted with Aroma, 
will produce a fair yield. 
The Gandy blossoms late and is seldom injured by frost. 
Its plant growth is strong and abundant, its foliage heavy and 
of dark green color. To anyone who understands fruiting the 
imperfect blossoming berries we recommend the Gandy for a 
late variety. 
CATSKILL 
(Midseason) 
Largest and most productive. This is a New York Station 
seedling No. 4435. Before this variety was named it took a 
prize at the Massachusetts Horticultural Society in Boston. 
Catskill is a cross between the Marshall and Premier. From 
the information we have Catskill will be worth planting as a 
midseason berry with most of the other leading standard 
varieties. We hold it next to the Dorsett and Fairfax, not 
only because of our own experience but that which we have 
received from other sections of the country. They are sweet 
as sugar, having a delicious flavor. For size and wonderful 
color they are a real picture of a Strawberry. This variety 
will be a great advantage to you on the market, and bring 
you top money. Plant Catskill this spring and you will have 
downright pleasure, satisfaction and profit from your Straw¬ 
berry patch. Catskill is worthy of its name. 
EVENING STAR 
The fruit, plant growth, and season of ripening of the 
Evening Star resemble the Gandy so closely that they can 
hardly be discerned. This berry ripens late, has a hardy plant 
growth which withstands drouthy conditions well, and fruits 
excellent quality berries. Unlike the Gandy, however, it is 
perfect flowering. 
The fruit stems of the Evening Star grow in such a posi¬ 
tion that the berries seldom rest upon the ground. There are 
no “white sides" to this berry when it ripens. It is a fair 
shipper and adequately fills the bill as a good, all-round late 
berry. 
STRAWBERRY COLLECTION NO. 2 
With this collection you will have plenty of berries for the 
table and some for canning purposes. 
100 Bellmar___-__J __ 
100 Aroma__( P ° Stpa,d 
CARDEN SPECIAL NO. 225 
50 Yellow Free Blakemore 
50 Klondike 50 Aroma 
50 Bellmar 
25 Mastodon 
225 Plants 
$ 1.50 
Postpaid 
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