Good Profits Are Possible 
In These Items 
BOYSENBERRIES 
Boysenberries have created a sensation in almost all parts of the country. It is 
a large berry, having a distinct and delicious flavor all its own. 
It grows naturally close to the ground and is easily protected against severe 
winter conditions with a light covering of coarse material like slough-grass hay 
or wheat straw, which is advisable in Nebraska, Iowa and north. 

RHUBARB 
The earliest plant to furnish sauce and pie in the spring. Will produce indefinitely. 
Likes rich soil; will produce an abundance of juicy, delightful stalks. 
CHIPMAN’S CANADA RED. New. Is a very highly colored, attractive red stalk, of large size, pro- 
ductive, very tender and succulent, and of excellent quality. Particularly valuable for pies and des- 
serts. Its color when cooked without peeling, is as attractive as that of raspberries. 
VICTORIA. The old standby rhubarb. Very prolific. The best green stalk variety. 
ASPARAGUS 
This vegetable is rich in vitamins, which are so essential 
to health. Asparagus roots should be planted in well-pre- 
pared beds, the soil of which has been enriched by liberal 
quantities of well-rotted manure. Set plants 12 inches 
apart in rows 30 inches apart, or 18 inches each way. 
MARY WASHINGTON. A rust-proof variety, best for general plant- 
ing, and the market gardener’s choice. Produces lots of good 
clean tender, attractive stalks. You can sell as much as you 
raise. Order plenty. 

Marshall's SMALL FRUITS 
Plant Small Fruits and Garden Roots 
Full of Vitamins, Delicious Flavors and Health 
You can get big cash returns in health, better living, lower living costs—and CASH 
profits, too, by planting MARSHALL’S “Selected Strains” of small fruits. You can have 
plenty of fruit for immediate use, to can, to quick-freeze, to make jellies and jams, as 
well as eat from the hand. 
Our small fruits and garden roots, including Strawberries, Raspberries, Blackberries, 
Boysenberries, Gooseberries, Currants, Grapes, Asparagus and Rhubarb have been se- 
lected in the same careful manner as the larger tree fruits, shade and ornamental trees, 
insuring hardiness and superior qualities in all varieties, 

Page 26 
