Hunt's Perfection Plants 
Strawberry Plants 
Strawberry plants should be set out in rows 2 feet apart and the plants a foot 
apart, cutting off all runners as they appear. The varieties we offer are all perfect 
flowering and therefore need no association with any other variety for perfect 
fruiting. 
Shipping season lasts from August until October. We recommend early plant¬ 
ing to enable the plants to get established before the advent of winter. 
Uniform prices for all sorts, $1.50 per doz., $8 per 100, $75 per 1,000, all pot-grown 
Popular Standard Varieties, Pot-grown 
Varieties not listed can be supplied 
Aberdeen. Midseason. Produces immense crops of large, bright red berries. 
Ambrosia. One of the best very late varieties. Vigorous plants produce a tre¬ 
mendous amount of large bright red berries. 
Catskill. Midseason. A heavy yielder of excellent fruit. 
Chesapeake. The berries are uniform in size and shape, mostly heart-shaped. 
Color is bright crimson and the flesh firm and of excellent quality. Midseason 
to late. 
Corsican. Midseason. Large in plant, berry, and crop, Corsican is preferred by 
many experts to New York as a midseason sort. 
Dorsett. Early. Best in flavor, largest in size, most attractive in appearance, 
heaviest in yield, this introduction of the U. S. Department of Agriculture 
leaves nothing to be desired. The berries, which are large, firm, and shapely, 
are produced in amazing quantities on healthy plants. 
Early Jersey Giant. Fruit of extra-high quality, and extremely productive. 
Fairfax. Ripening just after Dorsett, this remarkable berry rules the second- 
early market as decisively as Dorsett rules the earlier sorts. The solid berries, 
which ripen evenly to a deep red and hold their firmness and flavor well, are 
perfect for canning. 
Glen Mary. Midseason. Large berries, deep red in color, with prominent golden 
seeds. (Plant near some good pollenizer, like Joe, for best results.) 
Grand Champion. The giant “all-season” bearer. Its enormous bright red 
berries are supremely rich in flavor and appear with Premier, continuing through¬ 
out the June bearing season. 
Howard No. 17. One of the best of the second-early varieties. 
Joe (Big Joe). A midseason to late variety, fully up to Chesapeake in size. 
Lupton. Very much like Gandy but much more productive and about five or 
six days earlier. We consider this one of the finest of the varieties fruiting late. 
Marshall. Vigorous in growth, with clean, healthy foliage. Very productive 
under high culture. Midseason. 
Narcissa. Early. Released in 1933 by the U. S. Dept, of Agriculture. A seedling 
of Howard 17 and Royal Sovereign, the same parentage as Dorsett and Fair¬ 
fax. The vigorous plants produce fruits of superb quality. 
New Washington. Popular late sort. Very prolific, with firm, delicious fruits. 
Premier. Excelled by no early variety. Produces vast quantities of berries of 
good size; attractive, and excellent quality. 
Sharpless. A variety that fruits rather late in the season. Produces handsome, 
large berries of fine quality. 
Success. One of the best early varieties. Bright scarlet, slightly oblong berries 
with blunt end. 
William Belt. Another old favorite. Very productive of large, irregular berries, 
unsurpassed in flavor by any other variety. Midseason to late. 
Uniform prices for all sorts, $1.50 per doz., $8 per 100, $75 per 1,000, all pot-grown 
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