WaYNESBORO NURSERIES, Ine. 


Cumberland 
Standard 
LATHAM. Brilliant red, mosaic resistant; good shipper as 
well as useful for canning. The most extensively planted 
Red Raspberry. Rates as high among the Reds as the 
Cumberland does among the Blackcaps. 
SUNRISE. A new, early Red introduced by the United 
States Department of Agriculture. Very early with a long 
picking season making it ideal for the home garden. Hardy, 
flavor and quality the best. Especially adapted to the 
South, where not all varieties are successful. Useful in 
connection with other varieties, because of its early ripening. 
~ Prices: $1.80 per 6, $2.60 per 12, $4.30 per 25, $7.50 per 50, 
$12.50 per 100,$27.50 per 250,$45.00 per 500, $80.00 per 1000 
Raspberry, Indian Summer 

Waynesboro 
ERRIES 
Modern Home Quick-Freeze Units and Public Frozen Food Locker Plants 
make possible fresh, frozen fruits and vegetables throughout the year. Naturally 
it behooves each home owner to fill his locker with home grown foods which 
always taste better. Berries have a high priority among frozen fruits. Plant 
not only for home use, but for an increasing commercial demand. 
RASPBERRIES 
There are two distinct classes of Raspberries—the Blackcap and the Red, 
the Blackcap being grown over a large part of the United States, while culture 
ot the Red is more or less restricted to the colder part. Here in Virginia we grow 
both but sell more of the Blackcaps, among which Cumberland is the leader. 
BLACKCAPS 
CUMBERLAND. Outstandingamong Blackcaps; standard commercial variety,, 
as well as popular in the home garden; large, purplish black, prolific. Firm 
good quality; most extensively grown Raspberry, succeeding over a wide 
area. Let your main crop of Blackcaps be Cumberland. Midseason, 
Prices: $1.45 per 6, $2.10 per 12, $3.30 per 25, $5.70 per 50, $9.90 per 100, 
$21.40 per 250, $34.50 per 500, $60.00 per 1000. 
NEW MORRISON BLACKCAP. Seve illustration and description below, 


















Euerbearing 
INDIAN SUMMER 
Best of all Everbearers. 
Introduced by New York Ex- 
periment Station and now 
being planted from Maine to 
Florida. Produces enormous 
crop in early Spring, repeating 
in the Fall. Large, conical, 
firm, excellent quality. Espe- 
cially suited for home use, but 
also being planted commercially. 
Prices: $2.00 per 6, $3.00 
per 12, $5.00 per 25, $8.00 
per 50, $15.00 per 100, 
$32.50 per 250, $55.00 per 500, 
$90.00 per 1000. 

TWO-YEAR 
TRANSPLANTED 
RED RASPBERRIES 
Latham, Sunrise. 
$2.25 per 6, $4.00 per 12, 
$7.50 per 25, $13.50 per 
50, $25.00 per 100 

BLACKBERRIES 
ALFRED. New, early, large, sweet, 
prolific berry, almost seedless. Ripens 
several days ahead of the Eldorado and 
reported more prolific. 
ELDORADO. Best known, most popular, 
hardiest, sweetest Blackberry. Large, 
black berries borne in clusters; prac- 
tically coreless. Extensively planted 
both commercially and for home use. 
Prolific and profitable. Midseason. 
Lucretia DEWBERRIES 
Often referred to as a low growing 
Blackberry. There are several varieties 
of Dewberries—Lucretia is the most 
popular and _ satisfactory. Fruit large, 
often measuring 114 inches in length. 
Sweet, highly flavored. 
BLACKBERRY AND DEWBERRY 
PRICES 
$1.45 per 6 $9.90 per 100 
$2.10 per 12 
$21.40 per 250 
$3.30 per 25 
$34.50 per 500 
$5.70 per 50 $60.00 per 1000 

Morrison 
A GIANT NEW BLCAK 
RASPBERRY 
The Giant of the Blackcap 
Raspberry family; nearly an inch 
in diameter. High quality, not so 
seedy as other Blackcaps. Mid- 
season, rapid grower, producing 
enormous crops often where others 
fail, adapted toa wide range of soils. 
Disease and drought resistant. 
Few days later than Cumberland. 
$1.80 per 6, $2.60 per 12, $4.30 
per 25, $7.50 per 50, $12.50 per 
100, $27.50 per 250, $45.00 per 
500, $80.00 per 1000. 










