BUTZER’S SEED STORE, PORTLAND, OREGON 
73 
THE NEW BOYSENBERRY RED RASPBERRIES 
Now we are offering you the Boysenberry which is 
as superior to Youngberries and other berries, as the 
Youngberry was superior to the dewberry and Logan¬ 
berry ten years ago; in fact, it is a better money 
maker than the Youngberry ever was, even when the 
Youngberry was new. 
The finest vine berry yet developed. An enormous 
berry with a flavor you can’t forget. Plant a few 
Boysenberries. You will be surprised at this wonder¬ 
ful berry. Plant 6 feet apart in rows 6 feet across. 
Price, each 15c; 10 for $1.00; 100 for $7.00. 
YOUNGBERRY 
Said to be a cross between the Loganberry and the 
Dewberry. An exceptionally fine flavored, very pro¬ 
ductive berry. Bears early and commands the highest 
market prices. The fruit colors well and is exception¬ 
ally sweet and large. Color, jet black. Ten plants of 
this variety will make a row eighty feet long, which 
will produce an astonishing amount of the finest ber¬ 
ries you ever saw. They will be a delight to you and 
your friends. 
They are very strong growers and should be trel- 
lised. A very simple trellis, consisting of two wires 
(the lower one 2*4 feet from the ground and the upper 
wire about 4 feet) is all that is required. Plant eight 
feet apart in rows seven feet across. About 800 plants 
per acre. 
Prices—Each, 15c; 10, $1.00; 25, $2.00; 50, $3.00; 
100, $5.00. 
CURRANTS 
Each 15c; 10 $1.50 
Perfection—New; largest and most prolific currant; 
bright red, rich flavor, mild sub-acid; no currant can 
approach in yield or quality this wonderful new cur¬ 
rant. 
Cherry—Very large, deep red, fine for preserving ; 
valuable market variety. 
Fay’s Prolific—Bright red, very sweet, stems longer 
than Cherry and fruit hangs on better than most 
varieties. To be planted with Cherry. 
GOOSEBERRIES 
Each 15c; 10 $1.50 
OREGON CHAMPION 
Berries very large, paie green color; very sweet and 
fine for table use and pies; bush strong, not very 
thorny; very prolific bearer; most popular sort we 
have. 
St. Regis (Ranere)—Known as the Everbearing 
Raspberry because of its long season. Fruit commences 
to ripen with the earliest and continuing on young 
canes until October, many quarts often being picked 
after the first snow falls. Berries bright crimson, large 
size, rich, sugary with full raspberry flavor; flesh 
firm and meaty. Each 15c; per 10, $1.25, postpaid 
Cuthbert (“Queen of the Market.”)—A remarkably 
strong, hardy variety; standing the northern winter 
and southern summers equal to any. Very large, conical 
berries, so firm they can be shipped hundreds of miles 
by rail in good condition; flavor is sweet, rich and 
luscious. The leading market variety for main crop. 
Special low prices by the thousand. Write. 
Each Per 10 100 
1 year .$ .10 $ .75 $3.00 
BLACK RASPBERRIES 
Cumberland—A healthy, vigorous grower, throwing 
up stout, stocky, well branched canes that produce 
immense crops. Fruit very profitable; large, firm, 
quality about same as Gregg, keeps and ships as well 
as any of the blacks. Mid-season. 
Munger—Large, black, hardy and productive. One 
of the very best. 
Each Per 10 100 
2 years ...$ .25 $2.25 $20.00 
1 year .. .20 1.50 12.50 
DEWBERRY 
Lucretia—Fruit ripens between the raspberry and 
blackberry. Berries large, handsome, sweet and 
luscious; trailing vines. STRONG PLANTS. Each 20c; 
per doz., $1.50. 
LOGANBERRY 
Transplants (2 year, extra strong)—Prices, each 
25c; doz. $2.25, postpaid. Not prepaid, each 20c; doz. 
$ 2 . 00 . 
HARDY CLIMBING VINES 
Vines are useful in many ways. They give quick results when planted on a new place, before trees and shrubs 
become established. For covering fences, rocks, walls, banks and trellises, they are peculiarly adapted. A porch 
without a vine is desolate and incomplete. 
.. .Scarlet Trumpet Honeysuckle (L. Sempervirens)—• 
One of the handsomest in cultivation ; a strong, rapid 
grower; flowers a bright scarlet, not much odor. Nice 
plants, each $1.00. 
Hall’s Japan Honeysuckle (L. Halleana)—A strong, 
vigorous vine with pure white flowers, changing to yel¬ 
low ; foliage remains green well into winter ; very fra¬ 
grant and covered with flowers almost the entire sea¬ 
son ; one of the best bloomers. Large plants, each $1.00. 
Veitchi (Boston or Japan Ivy)—The now famous 
Japan or Boston Ivy used so extensively to cover brick 
or stone buildings. The foliage is dense, completely 
carpeting a surface, and the autumnal tints of green 
and red are unsurpassed for beauty. Large plants, 
each $1.00. 
Chinese Purple Wisteria (W. Sinensis)—One of the 
best of the Wisterias ; rapid growing and elegant, at¬ 
taining 15 to 20 feet in a season ; flowers a pale-blue, 
borne in long pendulous clusters in May and June. 
Large plants, each $1.75. 
Quinquefo'ia (Virginia Creeper)-—Eastern U. S. 
common American Ivy; luxuriant foliage, assuming 
gorgeous colors in autumn. Large plants, each 75c. 
Clematis Jackmani—This variety is better known 
than any other, and still stands as one of the best. 
It is a strong grower, and produces a mass of intense 
violet-purple flowers four to six inches in diameter; 
from July to October. Each $1.00. 
Firethorn—Good variety to plant next to your home, 
very hardy orange colored berries. Beautiful in fall 
and early winter. Green foliage. Large plants, ea. $1.25. 
Japanese Red Maple Weeping and Upright Red 
Maple—The weeping Japanese Maple is one of the 
most beautiful red leafed trees there is. We can furnish 
this in the cut leaf weeping or the upright tree. The 
Upright Japanese Maple, 3 feet in height, each S3.00. 
The Japanese Weeping Cut Leaf Maple, each $4.25. 
Let Us Know Your Spring Requirements. We Will Be Pleased to Submit Prices 
