Huge Hybrid Blueberries 
(Vaccineum corymbosum named varieties) 
Really beautiful as specimens or in hedges. Suited for use 
in small quantities in the small garden. A 100-foot hedge will 
pay about $25 worth of berries a year! (Spaced 18 inches.) 
Why Wait? Plant Some NOW! 
And enjoy the berries sooner. Not only will they add beauty 
to your garden but each bush will pay for itself many times 
over! Hardy throughout U.S.A. Blueberries do fully as well 
with fall planting as with spring. 
Varieties and Prices 
(Each) (10) (25) (100) 
Paver Oe) 2 iN,):. 208. is $1.10 $ 8.50 $19.00 $70.00 
OEY SCI GEo MOM Foc dTl 28.9 28 phe WoO etl Z Ug ee2/.00207100.00 
4 year (18 to 24 in.) 
(Decringnade) an! ie. Poe 16.00%7230,002 2135.00 
Cabot—Early, broad spreading bush. Home use. 
Concord—Hardy, upright, midseason. Fine quality. Large. 
Jersey—Latest and largest berry. Hardiest. Best shipper. 
June—Erect bush. Earliest, dark blue berries. 
Rancocas—Early, good quality. Good shipper. 
Rubel—Late. Tallest, most erect. Good shipper. 
Stanley—Finest quality of all. Light blue. Spreading. 
Burlington—Newest named kind. Later than all others. Good 
shipper. Large. Good quality. 

Weymouth — New. The earliest of all. Berries sweet only 
slightly acid. Only 12 to 18 inch size at $2.50 each, 5 for $10.00. 

LOOK AT THESE BERRIES! 
Photograph is life-size. Light blue 
color. 
Set the plants in beds 4 feet apart 
each way. Several varieties 
should be included in every plant- 
ing, as an exchange of pollen is 
necessary to produce good crops 
of berries. Or order “mixed” if 
you wish—we will assort for good 
pollenization. All varieties are 
almost equally fine. 
Eat Blueberries All Year 
The berries can be canned as 
readily as tomatoes and by al- 
most any standard canning meth- 
od. Excellent pies, but usable 
served cold from jars, too, like 
canned peaches. 
Some Idea of Crops 
A bush should produce 2 quarts 
(worth 75c wholesale) its 6th year 
and by the 8th or 9th about $1.50 
a year in blueberries. Planted 6 
ft. apart (1200 to the acre) you 
could safely expect on good land 
a gross income of $1200 a year, 
selling wholesale. Picking costs 
are high, but hiring all work 
done, a net profit of $600 an acre 
is actually being made on these. 
The bushes produce for several 
generations, without care or 
trouble. 
Page 62 

Look at this bush! 
Dwarf (about 4 feet high) and neat with clean 
bark and leaves. 
Ornamental thru 4 seasons: 
Spring:—A bass of clustered white and pink 
bells. 
Summer:—Loaded with handsome blue berries. 
Fall:—Brilliant colored leaves. 
Winter:—Bright gray and red twigs. 
Needs only an acid soil 
Blueberries require an acid soil containing 
peat or other rotted vegetable matter. They 
need a moderate supply of soil-moisture, and 
good drainage so that the roots can get air 
during the growing season. 
Prune for Heavy Yield 
You will get fruit if you just leave ‘em alone. 
But more and larger if you cut out all old 
canes, and keep new shoots coming. Also 
when in bloom cut away about half each 
flower cluster. Fertilize in May. 


