PLANT OUR DISEASE-FREE BERRY PLANTS 
STRAWBERRIES 
Our strawberry plants come from inspected fields, assuring 
you disease-free plants of vigor and quality. 
Keith’s Super-Giant Mastodon. An improvement over the orig¬ 
inal Mastodon. Berries are larger and ripen more evenly all 
over the plant. Our grower says: “I have raised everbearing 
berries for the past 18 years and each year try out new vari¬ 
eties and today I have only one everbearing that will equal or 
better the Super Giant and it will be two or three years before 
I will offer plants from my planting. I can without reserva¬ 
tion, recommend Keith’s Super-Giant Mastodon as the best 
everbearing berry on the market today. You can assure your 
customers that this truly outstanding berry will more than 
please them. Tell them that Super-Giant will over a period of 
years outyield any other variety.” Berries are of delicious 
flavor. Prices postpaid: 25 plants, 75c; 100 plants, $2.50; 250 
plants, $5.00; 1000 plants, $15.00. 
New Gem. Here’s an outstanding new variety in everbearers. 
Gem produces a very firm, good flavored and extra fine ap¬ 
pearing berry. Fruit is of good size and very uniform. A very 
heavy plant producer. Gem is an extra fine commercial berry 
but requires more care such as runner trimming. Yield is very 
heavy the first season after setting. Our grower says: “A field 
of Gems was set in the spring and the yield up to and includ¬ 
ing September 19th of the same year was just over 200 crates 
per acre before freezes cut down the production. I have grown 
the Gem for three years and find it a heavy yielder of very 
delicious, uniformly rich red fruit. You should insist upon 
your customers trying Gem.” Prices postpaid: 25 plants, 50c; 
100 plants, $1.50; 250 plants, $3.50; 1000 plants, $12.00, 
Rockhill No. 26. A new and distinctly flavored strawberry. It 
bears a large, attractive berry about the size of Mastodon. Its 
flavor is superb, unsurpassed by any of the spring fruiting 
sorts; it is prolific. Plants set in the spring 30x36 inches have 
been bearing 400 to 600 24-pint crates the same season. An 
everbearing sort. Stands extreme cold weather and can be 
depended upon to produce a good crop from early spring to 
late fall. What might seem a drawback to this variety is that 
it does not make a large number of new runner plants. This 
results in greater expense for the first planting as plants can¬ 
not be sold at prices that are standard for other varieties. 
However, this is only a seeming drawback. The habit of the 
Rockhill is to produce a large number of crowns, running 
sometimes to as many as 25 to the plant in a single season. 
The energy employed by other kinds of berries in producing 
runners and nourishing plants at a distance is kept at home 
with Rockhill. This habit accounts for the quick and abundant 
fruit production of Rockhills. It may also be stated that no 
time or expense need be expended in keeping off runners. Such 
new plants as form begin bearing almost at once, multiplying 
crowns throughout the season. Rockhill plants are very scarce, 
hence we suggest placing orders early. We have only ten 
thousand plants to sell this spring. First here, first served. 
I’rices postpaid: 10 plants, $1.00; 25 pituits, .$2.00; 100 plants, $5. 
BOYSENBERRIES 
The new Boysenberry is such an improvement over all other 
vineberries that berry growers in California, where it origi¬ 
nated, are destroying hundreds of acres of other vineberries 
and replacing them with this amazing new berry. The r-eason 
is evident: 
One larger producer of Boysenberries has this to say: “After 
marketing our berries this season we were assured of the suc¬ 
cess of the Boysenberry and believe that in a few years it will 
become one of the most popular market berries. We are also 
starting to market a soft drink made from the Boysenberry- 
We will need several million pounds of berries ourselves this 
coming season. We are telling you this so you may assure 
your customers that they will not regret setting out Boysen¬ 
berries.” 
Boysenberries have a distinctly delicious and different 
flavor. They are of immense size. If the Boysenberry is per¬ 
mitted to remain on the vine until it is fully ripe it is much 
sweeter than any other vine berry. When eaten fresh, no sugar 
is necessary because it has a very high sugar content. 
Prices: No. 1 strong tip-rooted plants prepaid to any express 
or po.sloffice in the I . S., 20c each; 10 plants $1.25; 100 plants 
$7.50. 
YOUNCBERRIES 
Thornless Youngberry. The fruit is identical to the original 
Youngberry but the canes lack those disagreeable thorns. You 
can enjoy the exquisite flavor of Youngberry without the dis¬ 
comfort of thorns. Postpaid, each 25c; .$2.00 for 10 plants. 
Order early. 
RHUBARB PLANTS 
McDonald’s Red Rhubarb. Our plants are from the original 
planting. We offer only good strong divisions, two-years of 
age. McDonald’s Red Rhubarb carries the quality of its 
delicious flavor longer. Color dense, bright-red. Verj' ten¬ 
der and brittle. No strings. This variety starts a little later 
in the Spring, but produces over a long period. Not quite 
as large as Riverside Giant but of better flavor and texture. 
Medium divisions, each 35c, postpaid. Large divisions, each 
50c, postpaid. 
SEED POTATOES 
New Chippewa. This is the 
most recent introduction by the 
Department of Agriculture. In 
all tests the yields have been 
surprisingly high. Chippewa 
while not as early as Quick 
Lunch or Bliss Triumph is of 
better quality both from a 
standpoint of flavor and keep¬ 
ing. Likewise, Chippewa is 
highly resistant to mild Mosaic 
disease which devastates many 
varieties during the growing 
period. The tubers are smooth, 
regular in outline, with very 
shallow eyes. An excellent 
cooker. Color, creamy pink. 
Our seed is mountain grown, 
therefore hardier. Our grower ii 
new introduction. 10 lbs. $1.50, 
for quantity prices. 
NEW CHIPPEWA 
very enthusiastic about this 
postpaid to 3rd zone. Write 
Early Bliss Triumph. Tubers of handsome appearance, being 
almost round, with slightly depressed eyes, mostly at the seed 
end. Run very uniform as to size and shape. Heavy yielder 
and good flavor. A pinkish-red potato. Plant only certified 
seed as a protection against mild Mosaic disease which often 
reduces yields 60%. Certification is your only guarantee 
against this disease. 10 lbs. $1.25, postpaid to 3rd zone. Write 
for quantity prices. 
Quick Lunch. One of the earliest potatoes. Pinkish tinge when 
first dug. Excellent flavor and good yielder. Not a good 
keeper. We offer mountain grown seed only. 10 lbs. $1.25, 
postpaid to 3rd zone. Write for quantity prices.' 
The New Warba. A cross of a selected seedling and Bliss 
Triumph. It resembles Bliss Triumph, though is larger in size; 
a bigger yielder, has white crisp flesh and is exceptionally 
quick maturing. Its season is 7 to 10 days earlier than Bliss 
Triumph. Vines upright, sturdy and resistant to mild Mosaic. 
Tubers are short, round, blocky, white with pink eves and 
uniform in size, with few culls. 10 lbs. $1.35, postpaid to 3rd 
zone. Write for quantity prices. 
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