UTAH EVERBEARING STKAWBERRY 
There are three strains of the 20th Century type Straw- 
berry, and this is the best and most productive of the 
three. This berry has been grown very successfully in var- 
ious parts of California as well as in other states. [t is 
a very fine berry, large, deep red, wonderful flavor, very | 
productive, excellent shipper and bears for a long period; 
an Orange Co. grower told us of it this summer, ‘‘Bears all 
year, 
Some growers have proclaimed this to be the best straw- 
berry they ever grew. 
The plants we offer are grown by the same grower who 
is growing the University varieties we are offering, on 
land free of insect pests, nematodes, weeds and grass. No 
bette*® plants can be had. 
FORTUNE EVERBEARING STRAWBERRY 
The introducer ot this new strawberry, in Riverside Co., 
Calif., tells us that this is the largest of strawberries, 
averaging even larger than Streamliner, deep red to the 
core and very sweet flavored, producing from March to late 
in the fall, and with him, outyielding Streamliner four to 
one. It is not as yood a runner maker as Streamliner. They 
are uniformly of good strawberry shape. In the middle of 
August we saw a test planting of Fortune, Streamliner, 20th 
Century and Rockhill, set out the last of April. Fortune 
had the biggest crop, Streamliner second and 20th Century 
ans Rockhill] the least, in this particular planting at that 
ate. 
STREAMLINER EVERBEARING STRAWBERRY 
Mr. G. P. Baill, of Strawberry Wall fame, has been getting 
the plants fer his wall from us ever since he first built it, 
getting another 550 Streamliner for it from us last season. 
A Burbank, Calif., grower wrote in fall, 1947: “The Strea 
liner is the best strawberry I have seen in California, and 
the only one which does well here.” 
A Chatsworth grower wrote Jan. 2, 1948: ‘‘We are happy to | 
tell you that the Streamliner berry is more than anyone 
could expect. They bore abundantly and the size was very gra- 
tifying. Through the peak of the season we averaged one cent 
per berry gross. We sold to the wholesale market until the 
end of October. When they were in the flats ready to go they 
were a sight to behold.” 
A Seattle man, in ordering Streamliner plants Oct. 25, 
1947, said: “My neighbor set out 100 Streamliner plants from 
you last spring and they have done very well, the best ever- 
bearing strawberry I have seen yet, and still bearing at this 
late date.” 
