Thornless Youngberry 
PROTECTED BY 
U. S. PLANT PATENT 
Plant Youngberries for profit. Plant them for home use. Their 
large size, sweet, delicious flavor and fineness of texture are practically 
unexcelled. 
The same large size, delicious berries of the common Youngberry 
described below except the canes are entirely smooth and have abso¬ 
lutely no thorns. Yield is very heavy—in fact a one-year plot test 
showed the Thornless type to outyield the common Youngberry by 20%. 
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 pint basket. 
COMMON YOUNGBERRY 
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. 
Youngberries thrive where any other bush fruit grow but do 
best in states the same latitude as Ohio and South. 
CANNED YOUNGBERRIES 
Ask your grocer for canned Youngberries. We note that 
some of the larger stores are carrying them in stock. They 
are delicious as they come from the can or with sugar and 
cream— and how they do make pies. 
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 shipping purposes. My neigh¬ 
bor has one-half acre bearing its 
second crop from which he harvested 
fifty 24-quart crates which sold 
readily for $3.00 per crate. This is 
a year when very few berries brought 
that figure. E. L. McJilton, Illinois. 
Postpaid 
Prices 
Each 
6 
12 
Youngberry Plants 
Common, 1 yr. 
. . .$ .15 
$ .75 
$1.00 
Common, bearing age. . . 
. . .25 
1.00 
1.50 
Thornless, 1 yr. 
1.15 
2.00 
Thornless, bearing age. . 
. . • .75 
2.65 
5.00 
Boysenberry . 
2.00 
3.25 
By Express Not Prepaid 
25 
50 
100 
200 
1000 
$1.75 
$2.50 
$3.50 
$ 6 00 
$25.00 
2.75 
4.00 
7.00 
12.50 
40.00 
3.50 
4.75 
7.75 
15.00 
55.00 
7.50 
5.50 
12.00 
20.00 
35.00 
New Boysenberry 
Boysenberry 2 inches in length. ® 
HIGHEST QUALITY OF ALL THE BRAMBLE FRUITS. 
The New Boysenberry is truly a glorified Youngberry. We 
offer it this year for the first time because of the tre¬ 
mendous large size of the berries, because of its very 
prolific fruiting and lastly because we think that both the 
Boysenberries and Youngberries (both very similar in 
flavor) are the highest quality of all bramble fruits. 
FOR HOME USE —A few Boysenberry plants will be 
the joy of your garden. Look closely at this picture 
and measure the berry. You will enjoy fruit like this 
and you will have something to show your friends. 
You will agree with us in saying they are the finest 
berries you have ever tasted, either fresh, canned, 
in jams, jellies or pies. You will be proud of your 
Boysenberries. Plant 6 feet apart in rows 6 feet 
across. You will be surprised at the berries you can 
get from a dozen plants. 
They are just as easy to grow as blackberries. They 
produce a larger crop, not because there are more berries, 
but because each berry is so much larger. The fruit 
sells for more the first time because it looks so fine, and 
it sells for more the next time because the customers like 
it so well that they will take nothing else. 
Boysenberries may be grown in Ohio and north with 
winter protection. South of the Ohio river they require 
no special protection over winter. Prices above. 
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