Brainerd Blackberry 
Prices Thornless Youngberry— 
12 plants for $2.00, postpaid 
East of Mississippi River; $3.00 
per 25, express collect; $4.75 
per 50; $7.75 per 100; $15.00 
per 200; $55.00 per 1000, by 
express collect. 
Place your order now as sup¬ 
ply is limited. 
Brainerd Blackberry—Photo U. S. Dept, of Agr. 
YOUN 6BERRIES 
Plant Youngberries for profit. Plant them for 
home use. Their large size, sweet, delicious flavor 
and fineness of texture are practically unexcelled. 
The Youngberry has achieved the greatest success 
ever scored by any of the berry family. It not only 
bears very heavily, but the fruit is easy to handle, 
is very attractive, ships well, keeps well, cans well, 
and has so many commercial possibilities, and fits 
in so well In the home garden, that everybody should 
be interested in having a few vines or a commercial 
planting. 
QUALITY COUNTS AND MAKES THEM SELL 
Youngberries are universally liked and easily 
grown. They are among our largest berries of dark 
wine color, have a minimum of seeds, are highly 
flavored, and yield a rich looking, cherry colored 
juice. In the home garden you will find that more 
fruit will be produced from a few Youngberry bushes 
than most any other that will grow in the same 
amount of space. 
Youngberries thrive where any other bush fruit 
grow but do best in states the same latitude as 
Ohio and South. 
Price, 20c each; $1.00 per dozen, postpaid; $3.00 
per 100; $25.00 per 1000, express not prepaid. 
NEW THORNLESS 
YOUNGBERRY 
This new plant is covered by U. S. plant patent 
and can be sold for planting only—not to be re-sold. 
The same large size, delicious berries of the 
common Youngberry described above except the canes 
are entirely smooth and have absolutely no thorns. 
Yield is very heavy—in fact a one year plot test 
showed the Thornless type to outyield the common 
Youngberry by 20 per cent. 
The very large size of both of these Youngberries 
may be visualized from the report of Peter Steig, 
Shandon, Ohio, that he produced 25 Youngberries 
that filled a quart basket. 
Youngberries MUST be 
planted VERY EARLY in the 
season or no success can be 
assured. Send in your order 
without delay. 
A New Tremendously Heavy Yielding Blackberry for 
the Central, Southern and Pacific Coast States 
A trailing type much hardier and better in all other 
respects than the Himalaya. Brainerd is extremely 
productive of very large clusters of high quality 
berries when fully ripe and which contain relatively 
smaller seeds than other blackberries of this type. 
The Department of Agriculture have made numerous 
tests of this variety and because of its greater hardi¬ 
ness and tremendous yields of large, highly-flavored 
berries have deemed it a very worth-while variety and 
worthy of introduction. 
We offer Brainerd to our customers this year for 
trial and suggest that you plant It near some other 
variety of blackberry to be certain of thorough polli¬ 
nation. Price, 25c each; $1.50 per dozen, postpaid; 
$6.00 per 100; $50.00 per lOOO. (Heavy 2-year 
bearing age plants 50% higher.) 
DEWBERRIES 
Y fJCR F*TI A The ^ err * es are f ar larger and 
w w M-t M. A A incomparably better than any 
blackberry and of unequalled excellence; soft, sweet, 
and luscious throughout; of brightest glossy black 
color. Most desirable variety for Ohio conditions. 
Price, $1.00 per doz.; $2.50 per 109; $9.00 per 
500; $16.00 per 1090. 
I am greatly enthused over the new giant 
Youngberry. It is the largest berry and prettiest 
dark wine color as well as the best quality of 
any of the briar fruits I have ever grown. Makes 
the finest pies and is a delicious dessert served 
with sugar and cream and solid enough for ship¬ 
ping purposes. My neighbor, this year, has one- 
half acre bearing Its second crop from which he 
harvested fifty 24-quart crates which sold read¬ 
ily for $3.00 per crate. This Is a year when 
very few berries brought that figure. 
July 8, 1932. E. L. McJilton, Illinois. 
YOUNGBERRY 
