Proven Berry Plants i i KNOTT’S BERRY PLACE / y Trees and Vines 
Youngberry—Actual Size 
If you could spend a day or two back 
of our berry counter, in June, when we 
have a complete assortment of all va¬ 
rieties of berries on display, and see 
the large percentage of customers who 
buy the Youngberry and hear them tell¬ 
ing us and each other about how they 
like them fresh and about the wonder¬ 
ful jams, preserves, jellies, juices, and 
pies they make from them; and note the 
large number who buy by the crate for 
preserving; you would then understand 
why we are so enthusiastic about this 
berry and why we devote so much space 
to it. The best and most satisfactory 
way to know about the Youngberry is 
to buy some good plants and set them 
out, and enjoy as well as profit by the 
results. Plants set out this spring will 
bear an abundant crop next spring. 
We have been growing this berry now 
7 years and we have never had a crop 
failure. The yield has been so good and 
the demand so good that we have in¬ 
creased our planting until now we have 
more than ten acres of this one variety. 
We have shipped hundreds of orders 
of Youngberry plants to growers from 
the Pacific to the Atlantic coast and we 
have had less than 1 % of failures re¬ 
ported with this variety. 
Mr. Commercial Berry Grower, plant 
this better berry before everyone else in 
your section is marketing them, for they 
will surely be doing it within a com¬ 
paratively short time. It is a healthy, 
vigorous, heavy yielding berry that will 
be a pleasure to grow. It is easy to 
grow, easy to pick, easy to prune, and 
the fruit is so fine that it is a pleasure 
to market it. 
Mr. Home Gardener, ten plants of this 
variety, which only costs you $1.00 pre¬ 
paid, will plant a row sixty feet long 
and will produce an astonishing amount 
of the finest berries you ever saw. They 
will be a delight to you and to your 
friends. Order now. We will ship now 
or hold the plants until you are ready 
for them. 
If there is any doubt in your mind 
about the superiority of this berry or as 
to its adaptability for your section, 
write to your favorite farm paper or to 
the Department of Agriculture at Wash¬ 
ington. D. C., or note what others say 
about it in our catalog. 
Plant 6 feet apart in rows spaced 6 
feet part. About 1000 plants per acre. 
Write for special prices in larger 
quantities or prices f. o. b. here. 
Discounts equal to shipping charges 
allowed on orders taken from our nurs¬ 
ery. 
Prices prepaid—1, 15c; 10, $1.00; 25, 
$2.00; 50, $3.00; 100, $4.50; 1000, $32.00. 
Thornless Youngberries —Due to some 
newspaper publicity there seems to be 
quite an interest in Thornless Young- 
berries. We have 14 different strains 
of the Thornless Youngberry and none 
of them bear well enough to warrant 
our selling them. We know a number 
of other successful berry growers who 
are having the same poor results with 
them that we are. 
The Loganberry 
The fruit is large, long, an attractive 
red color, and although it is a little sour 
it is highly prized by a very great many 
people for jams and jellies and for mix¬ 
ing with raspberries and other berries in 
jams and preserves. The vines are trail¬ 
ing and have to be grown on trellis. The 
berries are large and easily picked. Plant 
six feet part in rows six feet across. 
About 1000 plants per acre. 
Prices prepaid—Bach, 15c; 10 for $1.00; 
25 for $2.00; 50 for $3.00; 100 for $5.00; 
1000 for $40.00. 
SEE CULTURAL DIRECTIONS, PAGES 19-20-21 
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