
Increase your profit! One acre of Blackberries will 
average 800 to 2000 quarts, and prices on this fruit are 
always high. Plant Blackberries along trenches and the 
lot lines, and turn waste garden space into profit. Excel- 
lent for home and market use. 
BLACKBERRY PRICES 
No. 1 plants: 10 for $1.80; 25 for $3.30; 50 for $5.70; 100 
for $9.90. 
BLOWERS 
Buntings plants are the heaviest fruiting and best Black- 
berries in the world. Very hardy, the berries are sweet 
and delicious, jet-black color, good shippers, ripen in July. 
ELDORADO 
Another fine quality Blackberry. Plants are vigorous 
and seldom fail to produce a bumper crop. Commercial 
growers like their shipping qualities. 
FIELD CULTURE—BLACKBERRIES AND DEWBERRIES 
Plant in rows 7 feet apart with plants set 4 feet apart 
in the rows (1,555 plants to set an acre at given distances). 
Plow a furrow about 5 or 6 inches deep or dig holes 
6 inches deep and 6 inches square. Spread roots, fill hole 
with soil; firm well. Cut stock after planting approxi- 
mately 2 inches above ground level. Let them grow and 
the following spring cut the new growth back one-third, 
leaving two-thirds of the season's growth for production 
of berries. After fruiting cut all fruiting canes out and 
burn them. Cultivate occasionally and follow same pro- 
cedure each year, allowing about 6 to 10 canes on each 
plant to stand for fruiting each season. 

ayes, Boysenberry 
10 Plants for $2.55 
Selbyville, The biggest berry ever developed. Its size is un- 
D. | believable—two inches long is not unusual, three 
eraware inches long not rare. Fifty of these plump, inch- 
thick marvels will fill a quart basket; a sight so 
remarkable people can't resist buying them! They 
are rare—they are unusual. The demand is so 
tremendous retailers can't get enough of them. 
A cross between the California Loganberry, 
Raspberry and Blackberry. Just think of a berry 
that has a little of each of these fruits all in one 
giant, nearly seedless, beautiful wine colored 
berry, with a flavor that you will never forget. Get 
in on this wide-open market and make money. 
Buntings’ hardy No. 1, strong-rooted plants bear 
big crops the second year. Do not miss planting 
some Boysenberries in your garden this year. 
Prices: 3 for $1.15: 6 for $2.05; 10 for $2.55; 25 for 
$4.65; 100 for $14.05; 250 for $30.40; 500 for $48.85: -* 2B 
1000 for $85.00. — 
Dewberries 
AUSTIN. Ripens before Lucretia. A valuable va- 
riety for table use. Fruit very large. 
LUCRETIA. Extremely productive. Berries extra 
large, black in color; flavor rich, sweet and de- 
licious. 


we 

Lucretia 
Dewberries 
DEWBERRY PRICES 
No. 1 plants: 10 for $1.50; 25 for $2.75; 50 for 
$4.75; 100 for $8.25. 

Boysenberry 
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