
BANNER STRAWBERRIES 
25 for $1.50. 100 for $5.00 
BANNER. B9. The leading variety for both commercial planting and 
the home garden in territories near San Francisco Bay. The berry 
is a beautiful deep red; large, sweet and with fine flavor. The 
fruit is firm and ships well. It bears heavily over a long period and 
tne plants are long lived. 
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA INTRODUCTIONS 
25 for $1.50. 100 for $5.00 
DONNER. B10. Recommended as a splendid home garden variety 
for the central coast area of California. Particularly productive in 
early spring. Dessert quality very good; conical berries bright, 
glossy red. 
SIERRA. Bll. Recommended for the foothills and interior valleys. 
Very productive in late spring and early fall. Medium-red berries 
are conical, sometimes white-tipped. Dessert quality good. Sierra 
makes vigorous plants. 
EVERBEARING STRAWBERRY 
12 for $2.00. 100 for $15.00 
ROCKHILL. B12. Good production the first year and the best ‘'ever- 
bearing” variety for the home garden. Better results obtained from 
lifting, dividing and resetting the plants each year. 

BOYSENBERRIES 
THORNLESS BERRIES 
All varieties: 50c each. 12 for $5.00 
THORNLESS BOYSENBERRY. Bl. A brand new va- 
riety with the fruitfulness of the Boysenberry plus 
the advantage of smoother thornless canes. 
THORNLESS LOGANBERRY. B2. Patented. Thorn- 
less canes produce an abundance of fine berries; 
better than parent. 
THORNLESS YOUNGBERRY. B3. Not only produces 
sturdy, thornless, productive canes, but has qual- 
ity of berries similar to parent. 
CORY THORNLESS BLACKBERRY. B4. A nice berry 
for the home garden, as the smooth canes make 
it easy to handle and harvest. The fruit is very 
large, with small seeds and handsome jet black 
in color. Sweet and pleasant in flavor. 
BOYSEN, YOUNG, LOGAN AND 
BLACKBERRIES 
35c each, 12 for $3.50 
BOYSENBERRY. B5. The Boysenberry is nothing 
less than marvelous. The great size of the berries, 
together with the abundance of the crop would 
prove an attraction to any planter. Combine with 
these features the flavor of the fruit, which adds 
to that of the Youngberry the characteristic rasp- 
berry flavor, and you have a berry which needs 
neither cream nor sugar for garnishment, but gar- 
nish with cream and sugar, and the Boysenberry 
makes a dish fit for a king. 
LOGANBERRY. B6. Thrives in nearly all 
sections in California. The fruit is large, 
dark red; sub-acid in flavor. Ships well. 
Highly prized for canning, jarns, and jellies. 
YOUNGBERRY. B7. Of comparatively recent 
introduction but has been gaining in popu- 
larity so fast it is now one of our most im- 
portant berries, both in the home garden 
and commercially. The fruit is large, red- 
dish black with rich pleasing flavor. The 
seeds are few in number and soft. The vines 
are vigorous, prolific, with few thorns 
which makes picking very easy; trailing in 
habit. It is easy to grow, thrives almost 
everywhere and we highly recommend it. 
MAMMOTH BLACKBERRY. B8. Plants are 
vigorous, bushy, and seldom fail to pro- 
duce a bumper crop. The berries are sweet 
and delicious, jet black color, good ship- 
pers, ripen in July. 
GOOSEBERRIES 
AND CURRANTS 
50c each, 12 for $5.00 
PERFECTION CURRANT. B17. A leading. 
variety in all sections. Fruit is bright red 
and of good size. The plants are abundant 
producers. 
CHAMPION GOOSEBERRY. B18. Berries 
medium in size and of good quality. Free 
from mildew. The leading commercial va- 
riety in California. 
VEGETABLE 
PLANTS 
BERRIES 
RASPBERRIES 
25c each, 12 for $2.50 
‘CUTHBERT. B13. (Red.) Our best home garden va- 
riety and also an important commercial sort. The 
fruit is a deep red and of excellent quality. Mid- 
season. 
HYDE’S EVERBEARING. B14. A splendid red rasp- 
berry for central California. The berries are bright 
red, medium in size, and firm. Has a very long 
ripening season and ships remarkably well. 
CUMBERLAND BLACK CAP. B15. The leading 
black raspberry. The fruit is of fine appearance, 
tastes good, keeps well, and sells well. Every 
berry grower should have a few Black Caps. 
(Priced the same as Boysenberries.) 
BLUEBERRIES FOR SHADE 
Here is something new for your garden. Blue- 
berries require the same culture as Azaleas, Ca- 
mellias, and Rhododendrons. The foliage resem- 
bles that of Azaleas and the flowers in clusters 
are dainty, bell-shaped, tinged pink. A useful 
ornamental as well as a valuable fruitbearing 
shrub. Plants sold only in groups of three, one of 
each of a variety required for cross-pollination. 
Balled. “2-year, $3.50 for the group. (Catalog No. 
B16.) 
RANCOCAS. Early, large berries 
RUBEL. Midseason, medium-large berries. 
GROVER. Late, large berries. 

LOGANBERRIES 
MARY WASHINGTON ASPARAGUS. V3. White asparagus 
is produced by ridging the soil above the plants so that 
the shoots will be kept below ground. Plant the crowns in 
GLOBE ARTICHOKE. V1. This is the arti- 
choke of commerce. We supply strong, 
young suckers capable of producing a good 
crop of buds the summer following planting. 
The young plants should be set out about 
three feet apart each way in loose, fertile 
soil. Provide regular irrigation and clean 
cultivation. Care should be taken in culti- 
vating and that none of the soil lodges in 
the crown of the growing plants, as this 
will lead to suffocation of those parts of 
the plant from which the young stems arise. 
The artichoke is a perennial enjoying the 
mild winters in most sections of California 
and is capable of producing three or four 
seasons. 35c each, 3 for $1.00. 
STRAWBERRY RHUBARB. V2. This is a vig- 
orous growing variety producing large, 
succulent stalks throughout the winter. As 
the production of the large, fleshy leaf 
stems depends upon the plantfood stored 
in the roots, careful attention to its culture 
will reward the home gardener with an 
abundance of stalks. Cultivate and irrigate 
regularly and provide an application of 
fertilizer at least once each season. 35c 
each, 3 for $1.00. 
a Turn to CENTRAL 
INSERT PAGES FOR 
CULTURAL DIRECTIONS 
... all Berry Varieties 
52 
rows about six feet apart with the plants 24 inches apart 
in the row. They should be set from eight to ten inches 
deep. They are first covered with only two or three inches 
of soil and more soil is gradually added as the shoots be- 
gin to grow. Do not cut the shoots the first year. 12 for 60c, 
100 for $3.50. 

