73 
WILL’S PIONEER SEEDHOUSE, GREENHOUSE AND NURSERY 
Strawberries 
We are pricing strawberry plants only at postpaid prices. All orders for them will be shipped separately as we can not usually 
start shipping them till nearly May first, and the plants are likely to be damaged if packed in with other goods. 
PRICES: 
PROGRESSIVE 
25 . . . ..$ 0.60 
50 . 1.00 
100 . 1.S0 
1000 . 16.00 
SENATOR 
DUNLAP 
25 .$0.35 
50.60 
100 . 1.00 
1000 . 8.00 
PROGRESSIVE EVERBEARING. (Per¬ 
fect flowering.) After many years of 
testing the Progressive still holds first 
place as the best standard everbearing 
strawberry for the Northwest. We 
have decided to sell only the Progres¬ 
sive as a standard sort. It is very 
productive, very hardy and gives the 
best satisfaction of any of the many 
sorts we have tried. Keep blossoms 
picked off during the spring in which 
plants are first set out if you wish a 
good fall crop. 
SEN. DUNLAP. June Bearing (Perfect Flow¬ 
ering). This is the greatest of all the June 
bearing strawberries. The vine is tough, 
bright, a rampant runner, and a sturdy 
grower. It is wonderfully productive and 
each berry is regular in shape and of de¬ 
licious quality. The berry is large, bright 
red and glossy, firm, a good keeper and 
the very best sort for canning. 
DRYWEATHER EVERBEARING STRAW¬ 
BERRY. This is one of the productions 
of Professor A. F. Yeager and possesses 
the usual merit that has come to be ex¬ 
pected from his breeding work. The Dry- 
weather is an everbearing variety of very 
good quality, prolific and more drouth re¬ 
sistant than any other strawberry we have 
ever seen. Our stock is still very limited. 
Price, postpaid, per do/,., 75c; 25, $1.40. 
Senator Dunlap 
Nat ive W ild Grape 
Hardy Grape Vines 
NATIVE WILD GRAPE, Vitis riparia. To insure fruiting 
several should be planted. This is one of the most sat¬ 
isfactory wild fruits for cultivation. A small arbor 
planted with about a dozen vines will produce several 
bushels of grapes. . The fruit is unsurpassed for jelly, 
jams and grape juice, and the plant is one of the easiest 
to grow. 3-year plants, each, 20c; 10, $1.60. Add 5c per 
plant or 20c for ten if postpaid. 
BETA GRAPE, it has been tested over the whole North¬ 
west and is giving satisfaction wherever grown. In ex¬ 
posed locations and under dry conditions it is not advis¬ 
able to plant it, but with plenty of mois¬ 
ture, in good soil and with some shelter 
it does remarkably well. When the loca¬ 
tion is doubtful we advise Winter cover¬ 
ing. The berries are blue black, of 
medium size, with a pleasant aromatic 
flavor; they ripen about the last of Au¬ 
gust. Strong plants, each, 25c; doz., 
$2.50. Postpaid, each, 30c; doz., $3.00. 
ALPHA. This is the new hardy grape 
which is proving equal even to the Beta.. 
In some North Dakota experiments it is 
hardier than Beta, and the quality is 
perhaps somewhat better. It appears to 
be a cross between the wild and Concord 
grapes. It resembles the latter except 
that it is a trifle smaller, but it is the 
largest of the extra hardy grapes. Each, 
25c; doz., $2.50. Postpaid, each, 30c; doz., 
$3.00. 
Horseradish 
Should occupy a place in every garden along with rhu¬ 
barb (see page 31) and asparagus (see page 14)* 
BOHEMIAN. A particularly large and smooth-roo’ted va- 
- riety of fine flavor. Postpaid, doz., 35c. E. O. B. Bis- 
y march, doz., 30c. 
Beta Grapes 
