
YOUNGBERRY 
YOUNGBERRY 
The new Youngberry has achieved great 
success. It not only bears heavily but the 
fruit is easy to handle; it is very attractive, 
ships well, keeps well and cans well. It 
has so many commercial possibilities and 
it fits in so well in the home garden that 
everybody should be interested in having 
a few vines or a commercial planting. The 
Youngberry is the result of the careful and 
patient efforts of Mr. Young in crossing the 
Loganberry and the Texas Dewberry. It 
has given the world a choice berry with 
characteristics in size, appearance, flavor 
and general usefulness that has opened 
new possibilities in berry culture. 
Youngberries are universally liked and 
easily grown. They are among the largest 
berries; of dark wine color, have a mini- 
mum of seed, highly flavored and yield 
a rich looking cherry colored juice. In the 
home garden you will find that more fruit 
will be produced from a few Youngberry 
vines than any others that will grow on 
the same amount of ground. Youngberries 
thrive where any other berry fruits grow 
but do best in states of the same latitudes 
as Ohio and south. 
There is a great and increasing demand 
for Youngberries. There is no fruit capable 
of yielding a greater profit. There will 
usually be from 150 to as high as 250 
cases of 24 quarts from an acre, and that 
is usually consistent to figure on an 
average of $100 to $150 per acre after 
paying for picking, boxes and express. 
_ For field culture plant three feet apart in 
rows six feet apart. For garden culture 
plant four feet apart in rows five feet apart. 

BOYSENBERRY (Actual Size) 
Thornless Youngberry 
A sport of the common type and is 
almost identical except that the 
canes are entirely thornless, and as 
smooth as velvet to handle with the 
bare hands. This, of course, is a 
decided advantage both when train- 
ing and trimming canes or when 
picking the fruit. During past severe 
winters the ‘’Thornless’’ Youngberry 
has proven considerably hardier 
than the common. Yield is very 
heavy; in fact, a one-year plot test 
showed the Thornless type to out- 
yield the common Youngberry by 
twenty per cent. 
Each, 15c;: Dozen, $1.50; 100, $10.00 

Sensational THORNLESS 
BOYSENBERRY 
Probably the biggest berry ever devel- 
oped. Imagine berries 142 to 2 inches long, 
so large that 20 make a pint, and are so 
productive that J00 plants produce 50 gal- 
lons of fruit the second summer. That is 
the record of Boysenberry. The beautiful 
wine-red fruit combines the delicious flavors 
of Loganberry, Blackberry, and Raspberry, 
of which it is a cross. No new fruit in 
many years has caused such a sensation 
as Boysenberry. In addition to all these 
remarkable qualities, the plants we offer 
here have NO THORNS. 
BOYSENBERRY 
Said to be the largest and finest vine 
berry ever introduced. The Boysenberry 
is a new variety produced by crossing 
blackberries, raspberries and Loganberries. 
The flavor is a very pleasing blend of 
these varieties. It has few and soft seeds. 
The plant is very vigorous and hardy, 
coming through in good condition, without 
injury, in temperatures as low as 10 below 
zero. The berries are extremely large, 
many of the berries getting more than 
two inches long and over one inch in 
diameter. 
seldom fails. 
|  Boysenberry plants 
Dewberry plants 
Young Dewberry plants 
Thornless Youngberry 
Thornless Boysenberry ................::::0000 
Ocoee ree reeeeeeseaneeswassnsasseesensseees 
Raspberry plants ... 
Blackberry plants ... 
Gooseberry plants ... 

GOOSEBERRIES 
v 
GOOSEBERRIES 
Gooseberries should be planted in good, 
rich soil and well manured once a year. 
Prune regularly, thoroughly cutting out all 
dead wood and surplus branches. Plant 
in rows 4 to 6 feet apart in row. It is well 
to mulch heavily in the fall. Plants are 
hardy, rugged and easily grown. 
OREGON CHAMPION GOOSEBERRY — 
Berries very larrge, brownish red color, 
very sweet and fine for table use and 
pies. Bush a strong grower, healthy, not 
very thorny and a prolific bearer. One 
of the best berries for the market. 
HOUGHTON—A medium sized American 
variety which bears abundant and regu- 
lar crops and never mildews; fruit 
smooth; red, tender, and very good; 
valuable. 

BLACKBERRIES 
ELDORADO—For’many years Eldorado was the first main-crop 
variety to ripen; it has, with other notable virtues, great hardi- 
ness and freedom from blackberry rust in the plant, and hand- 
some appearance and exceptionally high quality in the fruit. 
Although an old sort, it is still much prized for home and market 
east of the Rocky Mountains, and in this great region very 
PRICES ON BERRY PLANTS 
Per 25 
$ 1.75 
2.75 
1.75 
2.75 
1.50 
2.50 
1.50 
10.50 


BAILEYTON, ALABAMA 
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