Mi 

eso 
a 1166 

At Last! An Everbearing Strawberry That Has Everything 
Starts Bearing 60 Days After Set and Continues Bearing Till Heavy Frosts. 
3 CROPS IN 18 MONTHS! 
Minnesota 1166 is a large, long-pointed berry, pro- 
duced on long-branched fruit stems, well hidden under 
the leaves for good protection. The color of the fruit 
is on the dark red order, and a solid red clear through 
the berry, even when the berry is still not quite ripe. The 
flavor is even better than the Wayzata everbearing, 
which up to now has always been the best flavored berry. 
Minnesota 1166 is just as productive as any everbear- 
ing strawberry we have grown, and makes a good quan- 
tity of plants. For best results in fruit production, we 
recommend that the runners be pinched off as fast as 
they appear in the summer. It’s a strong grower, re- 
sembling the Missionary variety. The fruit is attached 
to a fine green hull that will not pull out even when the 
berries are dead ripe. This, with the small amount of 
juice that this variety contains, will make it the very 
best jam berry ever introduced. This variety has been 
known to keep five days without refrigeration, and 
never mold or spoil in the hottest weather. It will 
dry up like a raisin before it will spoil. This will make 
it the coming commercial variety, as most other ever- 
bearing varieties will not keep long after picking. 
Minnesota 1166 berries shipped to the South Water 
Street market in Chicago this summer sold for $7.50 per 
24-pint crate. Once you have tasted Minnesota 1166 
berries you will eat no other kind. We know, for we 
grow all the varieties and at our table we choose the 
Minnesota 1166 every time. We have 150,000 of them 
to offer and we are sure this will not go half way 
around, so send in your order early, and take advantage 
of the discount we offer for early orders. 

Bears in 60 to 80 days 
3 Crops in 18 months! 
(Uy 


veneanen 
@ The Honey-Sweet 
Berry 
@ Red to the Heart 
@ Small Hulls 
@ No Green Tips 

WAYZATA challenges the world in 
flavor, size and productiveness. Now 
matched only by Minnesota 1166. Newly 
set plants start to bear in 60 days, and 
continue for nearly six months without 
any let-up, if they are cultivated once a 
week, and all weeds kept out. Adapts 
itself to most any type of soil. Plants are 
hardy and tough. Their dark green, 
leathery-like leaves are rarely attacked 
by common strawberry plant diseases. 
Wayzata plants set in the spring of 
1944 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, 1945, and another in 
the fall of 1945. 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 sufficient for an average 
family. 
PRICES 
On for acetals $1.50 QO RLOLEe cco nese $ 3.25 YAS SOSH Grp emoas $ 8.00 
L2eforeet. eee 2.00 5OmfOreee eee 5.50 TO00Rforsae ee 10.00 
NO DISCOUNTS ALLOWED 
[3] 

New Buffalo . . . ., Michigan 
