At last we have a new Strawberry 
variety for you, and it is a honey! But, 
oh, what a job to describe it! We looked 
in a book of synonyms for words, and 
found the following: sugar, saccharine, 
sacchrose, crystallose, and other trash. 
For the word delicious, we found pala- 
table, good tasting, pleasing, delectable, 
toothsome, dainty, and similar inade- 
guacies. Our final conclusion is that at 
times, the English language is a highly 
unsatisfactory instrument. 













- Yleetareua 
Plant Patent Applied For. 
The name Nectarena comes from two words: Nectar and Bed- 
arena. The word Nectar we use in whole, because it indicates a 
wonderfully palatable -sweetness, then we add the last three 
letters of the word Bedarena, because Bedarena was the parent 
from which this new variety takes its flavor. 

Try. Nectarena! See 
‘page 5 for Kellogg’s 
Tester Special. Save! 
Bi-Sexual. Does Not 
Require Mating 
The New 
Sweetheart 
of the 
Garden 
_ Cultural Note: 
Culture of Nec 
arena: same as 
»9ther varieties. 
Keep it in narrow 
ows. No variety 
should be allowed 
o run wild. It is an 
-asy matter to keep 
‘unners chopped 
off, 
Whats Wroug With 
This Picture 7 
Here is a picture of beautiful, large, bright 
red Strawberries. They even look appetizing, 
don’t they? But, there is something wrong 
with the picture. 
The trouble with this particular picture is 
that it cannot show the delicious taste of 
Nectarena Strawberries. It may arouse mem- 
ories in your mind of how ordinary Straw- 
berries taste, but Nectarena has a new taste 
with which you are not at all acquainted. 
The only way to experience the out-of-this- 
R. M. Kellogg Co. world taste of Nectarena is to order a few, | 
and try them yourself. It’s important. 
Three Rivers, Mich. 
[13] 














