Proven Berry Plants i r KNOTT’S BERRY PLACE ✓ i Trees and Vines 
The Youngberry 
A Basket of Youngberries 
The Youngberry —The fruit is very 
large and very juicy, with a rich blended 
flavor that is pleasing to nearly every¬ 
one, The color so very dark red that it 
is nearly black and the seeds are few in 
number and soft. The vines are vigorous 
growers; trailing in habit, and should be 
trellised. The fruit is borne on long 
fruit stems that v thrust it away from the 
vines ready to be picked, and the canes 
are not very thorny, which makes pick¬ 
ing very easy. If you are not growing 
Youngberries you should, for you are 
missing something. It thrives well over 
nearly all of the United States. 
The acreage in Youngberries has been 
increasing steadily all over the United 
States and the acreage in California has 
been increasing by leaps and bounds. The 
Government Market News Service re¬ 
ported 56 carloads sold on the Los 
Angeles market during 1932, 127 carloads 
sold in 1933, and in 1934 there were 205 
carloads of Youngberries sold in Los 
Angeles. 
While figures like these are a little 
unusual for a catalog, our reason for 
giving them is so that growers in other 
sections of the U. S., where Youngberries 
are not yet heavily produced, may realize 
what a demand there is in store for 
them when they produce enough berries 
for the public to get acquainted with 
them. 
If you are in the commercial berry 
business, or if you are planning on mak¬ 
ing a planting of berries for the market, 
you should plant some Youngberries, be¬ 
cause there is an insistent and growing 
demand for t"he fruit, and because you 
can grow them and pick them cheaper 
than most other varieties, and because 
they produce large crops regularly. 
These are important facts for the com¬ 
mercial grower to consider, because it is 
very discouraging to grow a crop and 
then find there is no market for it. 
If you are growing berries only for 
home use, you should, by all means, have 
some Youngberries in your garden. You 
will be delighted with their large size 
and wonderful flavor, and you will be 
pleased with the ease with which they 
can be grown and picked. Ten plants 
(enough for a sixty-foot row) will cost 
only $1.00 delivered to you. Order now 
and have a fine berry garden next year. 
Plants are ready to ship any time after 
January 1st. 
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. 
Prices prepaid—1, 15c; 10, $1.00; 25, 
$2.00; 50, $3.00; 100, $4.50; 1000, $32.00. 
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