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^ONDEBBERRY PLANT, 

 THREE MONTHS FROM SEED. 



THE WONDERBERRY 



LUTHER BURBANK'S 

 GREATEST CREATION 



A LUSCIOUS BERRY RIPENING IN THREE MONTHS FROM SEED 



Fruit blue-black like an enormous rich blueberry in looks and taste. Unsurpassed for eating raw, cooked, 

 canned or preserved in any form. The greatest garden fruit ever introduced and equally valuable in hot, dry, 

 cold or wet climates. 



People of the arid, hot, dry regions of the "West, the Great Plains and the South, "where fruits are always 

 ••Scarce, can with a few plants of the Wonderberry (more easily grown than Tomatoes or Beans) have an abun- 

 dance of luscious berries for family use or for market during the entire summer and fall; or all the year by 

 ricanning and preserving. Plants not only begin to ripen fruit early, hut continue to ripen great quantities until 

 checked by hard frosts. (They stand early fall frosts.) In mild climates, or with protection, the roots do not 

 winter-kill, but send up a strong new growth early each spring which is soon fruiting. The Wonderberry is 

 — ^e greatest boon to the family garden ever known and will be grown in every garden in the land. Also as a 

 pot plant it is both ornamental and useful, fruiting heavily all times of year. 



CULTURE. The Wonderberry is the easiest thing in the world to grow. Start seed in April, like Toma- 

 toes, and transplant to the garden at the proper time. Set plants two feet apart each way. Does not grow high, 

 but has a spreading habit. A poor soil may be recommended, as there is less vine grown but a great crop of 

 fine berries just the same. Seed may also be sown in the open groimd in May. 



jgp^^J^^J^ T^OTE °^ some similarity in growth and foliage of the Wonderberry to the com- 



mon Black Kightsbade (Solanum Nigrum) some elYort has been made in the 



horricultural press to discredit this grand new fruit — claiming it to be poisonous — with no foundation of fact 

 whatsoever for such false statements. Dr. N. L. Brittox, of the Xew York Botanical Garden, the greatest 

 authority on plants in America — declares that the two plants are not the same. To satisfy ourselves fully as to " 

 its merits we have grown a large acreage of it this season, and have eaten the fruit freely as gathered from the 

 plant in a raw state, also cooked and made into pies which'we consider equal, if not superior flavor to the com- 

 mon Huckleberry, and we otfer this new and wonderful fruit to our friends with the full assurance that it is just 1 

 exactly as represented. Be sure and send to Buckbee for true stock grown from original headquarters seed. | 



Price of Seed, Pkt. lOc; 3 pkts. for 25c.; }< oz. 60c.; oz. SI. 00. Price of Plants, Each 15c.; 2 for 25c.; doz. $1.00. postpaid. 



