How often have you passed the florists’ shop early in March 
and wondered why your daffodils never looked like that ? 
Well, they can. | 
Did you see those quarts of frozen strawberries in the A. 
& P. last week and wish you could take two home for supper ? 
You can. 
Did your husband complain about those mushy canned 
peas he had when you could not afford the quick-frozen ones ? 
You can afford them now. | 
Yes, you can afford all these and many more similar 
luxuries, small things perhaps in themselves yet all of which 
go to make for better living. The answer is simply to grow 
them yourself, easily, simply, inexpensively—the Chase Way. 
The Chase Way to Better Living is Simple 
This is no complicated professional idea which requires a 
trained grower and a library full of garden books to operate it. 
Anyone with an interest in growing things, and an evening 
or two each week can fill the ice box and the freezer to over- 
flowing with luscious, tempting fruits, fresh, crisp salads and 
at a time when prices in the stores are prohibitive. 
The Chase Way to Better Living is Practical 
The basic idea is as old as horticulture itself. It is the 
Chase Way that is new, the combination of a fine tool and 
simple, easy-to-follow instructions which will enable you to 
pick those daffodils early in March, or gather those rich, red 
strawberries fresh from the garden in April. Although the 
Chase Way is new to the United States it has been tried and 
retried in Europe for the past 30 years, tried under every con- 
ceivable type of conditions, tried and found to be first class. 
Literally millions of tons of food, extra badly needed food, 
were produced in England the Chase Way during the last war. 
People in gardens large and small, people with nothing more 
“than a window box, quickly learned to grow the Chase Way. 
Yes. The idea is practical. 
The Chase Way to Better Living is Inexpensive 
_ Although the results may be luxuries, the Chase Way is not, 
for by growing crops the Chase Way you can supply yourself 
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