Will Bear This Summer and Fall 
J A7 Never has a new strawberry become so popular as 
quickly as Streamliner. The reasons are simply that it 
5 produces so heavily the big red berries of such fine “ 
flavor. PLANTED THIS SPRING IT WILL BEAR 
| THIS SUMMER AND FALL. Then next year it will 
| produce a tremendous crop in June and after a short 
time it will start in again and keep on right up to 
freezing. The Berries are Big, Red, Sweet and DEL]- 
CIOUS. Streamliner is self-pollenizing so can be planted alone. Eat 
them, preserve them, freeze them. We want to repeat Streamliner 
has that rich, sweet real strawberry flavor. 
25 for $1.75 50 for $3.25 All Postpaid 
100 for $5.95 500 for $19.95 1000 for $37.50 
TWO OF THE FINEST | 
AAS SUPERFECTION SPECIAL 
25 Streamliner $ 
25 Superfection ( All 50 Plants for only 2.95 
(Total value $5.00) Postpaid 
With this Special, we include Free 25 Giant Gem 
Why buy strawberry fruit when it is so easy to grow your own! 
Freshly picked, home-grown berries taste better and are better for 
eating, freezing, canning or preserving. 
4 : 
= Superpection THE GREAT NEW _... 
EVERBEARING STRAWBERRY 
} 
N AQ It isa tremendous bearer. YOU WILL GET A 
BIG CROP THIS SUMMER AND FALL. And 
next year it will bear spring, summer and fall. 
The berries are big, firm and bright red and red 
7 all the way through. Serve them with cream and 
sugar. For preserves and freezing they are excel- 
lent, because they hold their shape and color. It is 
mighty fine when you can go out in your garden 
and pick fresh ripe delicious strawberries (saves 
on the grocery bill too) spring, summer and fall. 
Nh Strawberries have always been considered the 
most delicious of all fruits. Now it has been dis- 
covered that they are also very healthful. A cou- 
ple of rows across your garden will give you lots of berries. 
Superfection is self-pollenizing. 
In the 1951 Iowa State College testing garden at Ames, 
SUPERFECTION was the heaviest yielder of all Everbearers 
i tested. It produced at the amazing rate of 11,814 quarts per 
acre during the 1951 season. This was for plants planted in the 
spring of 1951. They were set 12 inches apart each way in beds 
of 3 rows. The runners were cut off all season. The beds were 
summer mulched with ground corn cobs, fertilizing the ground 
first. You can mulch with lawn rakings, fine straw, saw-dust. 
ALMOST 12,000 QUARTS PER ACRE THE VERY FIRST 
YEAR PLANTED. At 40c per quart worth almost $5,000.00. 
25 for $2.00 50 for $3.45 All Postpaid 
100 for $6.45 500 for $22.50 1000 for $39.50 
15 
