



The Honey-Sweet Berry 
Red to the Heart 
Small Hulls—No Green Tips 
Disease Free 
Three Crops in 18 Months 
Sweet as Sugar 
WAYZATA challenges the 
world in flavor, size and pro- 
ductiveness. Newly set plants 
will start to bear within 60 
days, and continue for nearly 
6 months, without any let up, 
providing that they are culti- 
vated once a week, and all 
weeds kept out. This variety 
adapts itself to most any type 
of soil. The plants are hardy, 
and tough. Their dark green 
leathery-like leaves are rarely 
attacked by the common straw- 
berry plant diseases. Wayzata 
plants set in the Spring of 1941 
will start to bear within 60 to 
90 days, and bear all summer 
up to severe killing frosts. They 
will again bear a full crop in 
June 1942, and another in the 
Fall of 1942. Three nice big 
crops in 18 months. It is not an 
unusual thing to have fresh 
strawberry shortcake for 
Thanksgiving days—both of 
them. 100 plants will be suf- 
ficient for an average family. 
Wayzata is fully as drought-resisting as the old Senator 
Dunlap variety. Wayzata differs from most all other varie- 
ties in this way. It makes very few new runner plants, but 
stools out all around the mother plant. These stools are real- 
ly the new plants, and start right in to bear all summer long. 
If Wayzata is set real early in the Spring, or the Fall before, 
they will make quite a few runner plants. This variety is 
considered however, a poor plant maker and this is the 
reason for them being priced higher than other everbearing 
varieties. 100 days after the plants are set it is possible to 
count over 20 fruit stems, and more buds and blooms coming 
out. The plants will be loaded with ripe berries, green ones, 
blossoms, and buds all at the same time. 
Wayzata fruit shipped from this section during the Sum- 
mer and Fall (1940), sold for $2.50 to $3.75 per 16 quart case. 
They have been retailing for 25c to 35c per quart at roadside 
stands. 100 plants will supply you lots of berries for table 
use and 1000 plants or more will make you more money than 
anything you have ever tried. It takes 8000 plants to set 
an acre. You have never really tasted canned strawberries 
or strawberry jam till you make some out of this Wayzata 
variety. No other variety will do after that, we are sure. 
Be sure to try 100 at least this year. The supply is limited. 
WAYZATA PRICES 
12S foresee $ 1.00 ZOOM TOR eee oe $ 8.40 
25° fors2. == 1.75 SO0mfOr- ote, 9.75 
50) for. a 2.95 400 for...._......- 12.50 
LOOm forse 4.50 500 for__.......... 15.00 
200s tor 6.95 1000 for. at epee: S 29.50 

5 Wayzata eveb. 
todon eveb. 



No Discount. ce 





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And a Barrel of Fun 
Grow any ever- 
bearing Strawberry 
in a barrel. Fifty 
plants can be plant- 
ed in a common 
Sugar barrel, or 
even an old potato 
barrel. Bore 2-inch 
holes in the side of 
the barrel, and fill 
barrel with some 
good soil. Then set 
the plants in these 
holes, and 10 plants 
can be set on top. 
Keep well watered. 
Be sure to bore a 
few small holes in 
the bottom for drainage. Barrel can be kept in the back 
yard, or even on the back porch. This saves space, and 
you can have berries for breakfast twice a week. No 
weeds, no cultivation necessary. Keep runners pinched off. 
Wayzata would be the ideal variety to grow by this meth- 
od. They make very few runners. $480 
25 Wayzata and 25 Mastodon—special price 
No discount 
{3} 
November 


