HOME AM) FARM MAGAZINE RECTTOT7 Selling Home-Made Preserves High Quality Farm-Canned Fruit Can Be Sold With Profit to the Farm IN SPITE of the excellence of our modern canneries, there is a good market for high quality farm ean ned fruit, preserves and jellies. Many town housewives, who prefer a home product, ean not or will not take the trouble to put up fruit themselves. Some are busy with work outside the heme; others have so many home duties that they can not undertake this extra work; and still others have not the health or strength to do it. On the other hand many a farm iousewife sees quantities of fruit go ing to waste on the home farm every year, besides what is marketed. She frcqnently puts up mueh more than she really needs herself, and yet finds that mueh goes to waste Yet if she but realized it a neat profit might be made on good fruit which for one reason or another is not marketed fresh, by pre serving and selling it to these town housewives who prefer canned fruit and jellies but do not make them for themselves. Frequently much of the work of preparing tho fruit for can ning could be done by children of the family, during the vacation time, and by earcful management of the work a h rgs amount of fruit could be put up with littlo trouble. This would be espe cially true if a good type of modern home canning outfit be secured. Mut Leara to Market. Undoubtedly one of the reasons why mora farm wives tin nnt nut m fruit and jellies for sale is that they do not know how to market them. Perhaps they hnvo already tried it once and have not been nble to dispose of their products. Yet if their products are high class and attractive in nnnear- aneo and the cost of getting them to customers is not excessive thero should be no difficulty m disposing of them nt good profit. It has been lono and the field is by no means over crowded. The first year, when a trade is bping estab lished, will bo the most difficult. Af ter that such products will, if they are bigh class and have proved satisfac tory to purchasers, almost sell theni clven. One way to start such a business on a small scalo is to secure orders, be fore the fruit season commences, from several housewives in town for a fam ily supply of a specified number of jars 8nd glasses of tho different kinds of fruit which you aro planning lo pre serve. If you are not well known locally it will bo advisable, if not necessary, to show samples of your work to the persona whom you are endeavoring to secure as customers and perhaps to give them nn opportunity of tas 'ing the various kii-ds. Orders may be secured by telephoning or calling upon persons ... ...... .1 .I . u ih ur.iiy luwjta n Hum juu Limit wuum -- V. Iiknl . u have to offer, by sending out postal M4ft k.lLII I. U an lilli.iumniit in ft local paper, through an announcement , mado at women's clubs and other meet ings, through a "demonstration" which persons arn invited to visi'. nt some convenient place in town, and in vnri oub other ways. Let people know that you havo tho fruit and tho equipment and will relieve them of canning trou bles by putting up whatever they wish jellies, jams or preserves. Locate City Housewives. If yon can not get enough customers in nearby towns, where you can deliver tho goods yonrself, it will be advisable, if yon wish to sell di;-ertly to the con sumer, to take the time and trouble to locate in cities several housewives who would bny from a dozen to three dozea jars every fall, and ship them their supplies by express. , Much profitable trade is built on ac quaintance. There are people you know, at home or elsewhere, who can put you in touch with city friends who wo M be likely customers. You may have to write several dozen letters to find your eustomers, but once located thoro will be little detail. If your product is as good as it ought to be there will be a tendency for the trade to grow through oue per son's tolling othors about it. When you write, business like way to offer your surplus is to take orders in advance. Explaia tho situation bow there is a surplus of peaches every J oar, for instance, which you put up lo- economy' sake. Then offer to take family order in advance for a dozen or two dozen quarts cf peaches put up as tho customer wants them so many brandied, so many canned and pre served, so many tumblers of jelly. That will mako a thoroughly attractive offer, and many city housewives will be glad to take advantage of it. You will secure a greater profit on your products by developing a list of customers in some such way and sell ing directly to them than would be the case if you sell your goods through merchants. But if the direct-delivery plan is not convenient for you, the next best step would be to visit the best grocers in nearby towns, show them samples of your products, and get one or two who will handle yonr product. Grocers Will Purchase. Grocers are usually glad to get regu lar supplies of real home-made canned fruit and preserves in glass, and by taking some samples with you and call ing on the leading grocers in a town or two, a good market for your products can frequently be assured. Moreover, the grocer can frequently give you valu able advice and sound business infor mation about the demand, prices, the best way to put up your fruit to meet loe.il tsste, etc. Usually siteh merchant? aro willing to buy outright, if you guar antee quality, so there will be no neces sity of leaving your goods to be sold on commission. Sometimes, however, it may be necessary to have them sold on commission. In this ease it is well to be sure that the goods will be suit ably displayed and advertised, or to advertise them yourself, stating where your products can be secured. If you do the advertising, less commission should be paid. If you adopt an attractive label with tho namo of yonr farm printed on it, rnit up fruit in jars of neat shape, and secure one grocer in a town or two near by so that orders can be filled prompt ly, you will find that in the course of a year, provided your product is of good quality, quite a quantity of it can bo sold, and with little selling effort on your part after the first arrange ment has been made. Attractive appearance will have mueh to do with promoting sales. In choosing a glass container, and a label, great care should be taken to have them at tractive and distinctive. A net con tainer hrlps to sell goods. It bears the saino relation to high grade produce that, a suitable framo bears to a bean tiful picture. Mako your label attract ive and distinctive. The products of some manufacturers aro labeled ia such ways that they stand out and draw at tention no matter v hcre the merchant places them on bis shelves. Products Advertise. Fine preserved fruits are ono of (hp tilings which readily advertise them selves if given a chance. They are food. They make a direct appeal to tho palate. Everybody is interested because every body eats and practically everybody likes frnit. They aro rich in color. With a line of clear home-made jel lies and jams, the Inbel should not be too large, for it should be possible to seo tho attractive tints of the product through the glass. Much stuff of this sort reaches the grocer soiled with dust from packing material. If yon sell your product throngh grocers, be mire that the jars are in spotless condition when they reaeh him. Tell him that yon think the colnr of your goods is a strong sell ing point, and ask him to display some of them where the light can shine through the glass. When endeavoring to secure custom ers, whether the consumers himself or grocers, explain reasons why your pro ducts are better than others why they should bo purchased. Cleanliness, su perior flavor, and convenience are all sound selling arguments. Keep List of Customers. After securing customers, if yon sell directly to housewives, keep a list of cutsomers, their address, notes as to their special likes and dislikes in the fruit line, the amount of preserved fruit thev aro apt to nes in 8 year, etc. This will help you to dispose of your uroduets noxt year. When delivering goods to eustomers tell or write them that job hone the fruit will be pleasing and that jou will be glad to know what the cutsomer thinks of it, and to make good any shortcoming. When a jsecond order is secured if you have a surplus of youi products to dispose of, tell the cutsomer that if she has been pleased with yonr goods yon will be glad to lave her recommend them to friends and relatives who might be in terested. Or ask her if she is willing to give you the names of a few friends who might like to buy your goods, that yon may see them or write them about yonr products. With high elase products, attractive ly put up, and delivered with the great est possible convenience to the con sumer, there should not be any diffi culty for a farm housewife in marketing a considerable amount of canned fruit and preserves. Good quality is of course essential but the numerous government and station bulletins on the canning of fruit, to say nothing of other publica tions on the same subject, make this easy to secure. Farmers' bulletin 203, will be found especially useful. Not every farm housewife ean or should at tempt to do this kind of work, of course. But for some it would undoubtedly prove a pleasing way to add to the income. China yearly sends $30,000 worth of peanuts to the United States. OS BE BBSS 8C GB BS E3 8BBBBBES Hotel SAVOY SEATTLE "Tw.iV. 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