These letters indicate the wide territory where Fairfax is grown and appreciated 
EXTRA LARGE BERRIES 
Licking Co., Ohio, April 23, 1941. ‘Received 
your last 500 Fairfax plants and wish to thank you 
for them. Have all of the 2,000 planted and they 
are doing well. They were a fine bunch of plants, 
much better than the ones I got a couple of years 
ago from another company. Our neighbor got 
some Fairfax plants from you about five years ago. 
Sure were swell berries. Thirteen berries filled a 
quart basket. Sure hope these are the same kind.” 
—NMr. Floyd S. Mossholder. 
FAIRFAX DO FINE 
Baltimore Co., Md., March 3, 1941. “Thank you 
for your very attractive Book of Berries received a 
few days ago. The Big Joe you sent me last year 
are doing fine. The largest part of my strawberry 
bed is set out to Fairfax. They have done fine.’’— 
Mrs. Mary Dallmann. 
MANY BERRIES 514 INCHES IN 
CIRCUMFERENCE 
Rockingham Co., N. H., May 15, 1941. “I never 
saw anything like the Fairfax berries I had last year 
from your plants. They were wonderful. Many of 
them measured 5)4 inches in circumference. All 
berry right through, no hard core or hollow place.” 
—Marguerite N. Franklyn. 
Fairfax 
Berries 










NICE PLANTS, TRUE TO NAME 
Montgomery Co., Pa., April 14, 1941. ‘Enclosed 
you will please find order for 1,000 Fairfax plants. 
Hope they will run true to order as the orders I 
have received from you. They were certainly 
fine.’’—Mr. Allen H. Landis. 
“I WANT FAIRFAX” 
Morrow Co., Ohio, April 28, 1941. ‘I want more 
Fairfax. This is the fourth order [have sentthis year. 
Our own plants have done so well and the berries 
in the past have been of such quality that several 
of my friends have asked me to get plants for them.” 
—WMr. W. I. Marlow. 
FAIRFAX BERRIES BEST IN ALABAMA 
Jefferson Co., Ala., November 19, 1940. ‘I sell 
my berries to private families of this city and they 
say these Fairfax berries are the best they have ever 
eaten, sweet to the center.’’—Mr. W. M. Gage. 
EIGHT BERRIES FILLED A PINT BOX 
Perry Co., Ill., April 9, 1941. ‘Two years ago, 
from the plants which I purchased from you, one 
of my neighbors picked eight berries which com- 
pletely filled a pint box. They were just 
like the pictures of your berries that you 
; illustrate in your 
- catalog. They were 
of the Fairfax varie- 
ty. Our plants are 
growing nicely and 
we lost only four out 
of the 1,460 plants.” 
—Mr.J.L. Patterson. 
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: , yey PAS 
PF “NE Y a, 
Beh San: , cae oe 
‘ Ce % Y bis . 
The Best That 
Money Can Buy 
