Cultivated Blueberries 
EASIER TO GROW. Each year as we learn more 
and more about growing the HYBRID cultivated 
Blueberries, we find that they are not nearly so par- 
ticular about the soil in which they will-grow as was 
earlier supposed. 
They're Easy to Grow ! 
Just plant the bushes 4x8 ft. apart, and cultivate 
as you would any bush fruit. Cultivated Blueberries 
require an acid soil, good drainage, and moderate 
supply of moisture. Almost every farm has a bit of 
low, sour soil which does not raise good crops. These 
worthless spots can be turned into real money makers 
when planted to Blueberries. If you do not have acid 
soil, this condition can be induced by mixing with 
your surface soil well rotted leaves, pine needles, 
sawdust or soil from the bottom of old wood piles. 
Cultivated Blueberries offer one of the greatest 
opportunities to the fruit grower! They have proved 
to be a greater money-making proposition than any - 
other fruit. 
Four-year-old plants often yield at the rate of 150 
crates per acre, and 16 pint crates sell at $6.00 per 
crate and more wholesale. Plants start bearing the 
third year. Mature bushes produce as much as seven 
quarts of berries in a single season. With proper care 
a planting lasts for a lifetime, and the first crop will 
pay for the plants! Instructions for proper planting 
and culture of Blueberries sent free with each order. 
Bluehkerries are Ornamental as 
(Listed in order of ripening) 
© CABOT One of the earliest of all varieties, this 
highly prolific blueberry plant is an established 
favorite with growers. Its dependable and heavy 
bearing habits, coupled with the extra large size of 
its well formed attractive berries, account for Cabot’s 
popularity. A vigorous grower, Cabot develops nat- 
urally to well formed plants. 
-@ RANCOCAS This unusually heavy fruiting va- 
riety has a tendency to produce extra heavy crops on 
young plants. In fact, the yield is so heavy that spe- 
cial care must be taken to prune the bushes severely 
in order to insure a good crop in the following year. 
Rancocas ripens later than Cabot but earlier than 
Pioneer, and the berries often exceed 19 mm in size. 
