KEITH'S. SPRING 
Strawberries 
Strawberries Our Specialty 
8 
When They Fruit 
Under this heading we list those 
varieties of strawberries that 
blossom and produce berries in 
the spring only. They are not 
Everbearers. We divide them into 
three classes—Early, Mid-season 
and Late, depending on when 
they ripen their berries during 
this spring strawberry season. 
Keith Offers Only the Best 
Keith does not offer a long confusing list of 
varieties some only “half good.” Keith lists 
fewer varieties and only the tested and proven 
kinds. Please write us if you want to know 
about varieties we don’t list. 
Dr. Burrill 

Dr. Burrill (Early) 
Can be grown in any soil—even hard clay or 
heavy loam, such as found in Illinois or Iowa. 
Easily grown, an ideal variety for beginners. 
Plant habits and berries resemble Senator 
Dunlap very much. Some are of the opinion 
that they are identical. We offer them to our 
customers at the same price as the Senator 
Dunlap. Berries dark red and sweet, good 
for canning and preserves. 
PRICES: 25 plants for 30c; 50 for 50c; 100 
for 85c; 200 for $1.35; 300 for $1.85; 500 for 
$2.65; 1000 for $4.50. 
(Parcel Post, Page 22.) 
Prices on Keith’s 
plants see Page 7 



PREMIER 
Keith’s Vital- 
ized Premier 
plants will yield 
8,000 to 12,000 
qts per A. for 
you. 
Premier Our Earliest Berry 
Withstands Frosts 
Fruit men and leading Horticulturists now ad- 
mit Premier to be the best early strawberries. 
Berries are large, firm, bright red, a rich 
flavor, red to the core. 
A very heavy fruiter. Berries don’t run small 
toward end of season. It’s a worthy early 
strawberry. Brings the highest price in any 
market. 
Premier is planted most exclusively in this 
great berry section as an extra early variety. 
It withstands frost better than other varieties. 
We recommend it most highly and will guar- 
antee our Premier plants to be genuine, to 
grow and satisfy. 
Produces Large Yields 
Keith’s “Vitalized” Premier 
plants often yield over 1% qts. 
of attractive large berries per 
every plant set. Think of pick- 
ing 12,000 quarts of berries per 
acre—8,000 Keith’s ‘“Vitalized”’ 
Premier plants can be made to 
do it on average soil. Set 
Vitalized 
Premier 
on plants that are grown right. 
It’s expensive to set cheap non- 
productive plants of any kind. 
Gibson (Mid-Season) 
A very hardy, vigorous variety which will do 
well in any garden soil. It is an old depend- 
able, producing as much as 7,260 quarts per 
acre per day. It is fully as dependable as the 
Dunlap. Berries are medium dark red, very 
firm. They can or ship well. Gibson is a good 
variety to set with other varieties for it is a 
strong variety for fertilizing the blooms of an- 
other. It also has as high as four fruit stems 
to the plant—big yields. 
PRICES 25 plants for 40c; 50 for 60c; 100 for 
$1.00; 200 for $1.80; 300 for $2.40; 500 for 
$3.00; 1000 for $5.50. 
(Parcel Post, Page 22.) 
[5] 
