Waynesboro 
BERRIES 
Fill Your Frozen Food Locker with Berries 
Modern home quick-freeze units and public frozen food 
locker plants make possible fresh, frozen fruits and vege- 
tables 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 in- 
creasing 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 of 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 the Cumberland is the leader. 
BLACKCAPS 
\ CUMBERLAND. Outstanding among 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. $1.60 per 6; $2.35 
per 12; $3.75 per 25; $6.65 per 50; $11.75 per 100; $23.50 per 250; $37.50 
per 500; $70.00 per 1,000. 
\ New Logan. A most dependable Blackcap. Equally as large as Cumberland, a 
week earlier. Heavy yielder. Resistant to mosaic. Prices: $1.80 per 6; 
$2.60 per 12; $4.30 per 25; $7.50 per 50; $12.50 per 100. 
Staudard 
Latham. Brilliant red, mosaic-resistant. Good shipper as well as useful for 
canning. Rates as high among Reds as the Cumberland does among Black- 
caps. $1.95 per 6; $2.75 per 12; $4.65 per 25; $8.25 per 50; $14.00 per 
100; $28.50 per 250; $47.50 per 500; $85.00 per 1,000. 
Sunrise. A new Red introduced by U. S. 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 
Red Raspberries are successful. Useful in connection with other varieties, 
because of its early ripening. $1.95 per 6; $2.75 per 12; $4.65 per 25; 
$8.25 per 50; $14.00 per 100; $28.50 per 250; $47.50 per 500; $85.00 per 
1,000 
\INDIAN SUMMER RASPBERRY 
New, Early, Red Everbearing 
Cumberland 
Best of all Everbearers. Introduced by New York Experiment Station and 
now being planted from Maine to Florida, Produces enormous crop in early 
spring, repeating in the fail. Large, conical, firm, excellent quality. Espe- 
cially suited for home use but also being planted commercially. 
Prices: $2.25 per 6; $3.25 per 12; $5.00 per 25; $9.00 per 50; $16.00 per? 
100; $35.00 per 250; $60.00 per 500; $95.00 per 1,000. 
TWO-YEAR TRANSPLANTED RASPBERRY PLANTS 
Cumberland and New Bristol Blackcap, also Latham Red. $2.25 per 6; $4.00 
per 12; $7.50 per 25; $12.50 per 50; $22.50 per 100. 
EBONY KING BLACKBERRY 
THE NEW BLACKBERRY 
Upright—Large—Sweet—Hardy—Early Heavy Producer—No Blanks or Sterile 
Plants—Best Blackberry Available 
This is the Blackberry we have been hoping for as other varieties have been 
producing sterile plants, resulting in disappointing crops. 2-yr., transplanted, 
$3.50 per 6; $6.50 per 12; $12.00 per 25; $20.00 per 50; $35.00 per 100. 
Note.—We can also furnish\Eldorade Blackberries cit same prices as Lucretia 
Dewberries, but for some reason we cannot explain, Eldorado Blackberries no 
longer fruit satisfactorily and we hesitate to recommend planting them. The 
New Ebony King Blackberry fruits satisfactorily and is an excellent berry. 
LUCRETIA DEWBERRIES 
Often referred to as a low-growing Blackberry. There are several varieties 
of Dewberries—Lucretia is the most popular and satisfactory. Large fruit, 
often measuring 114 inches in length. Sweet, highly flavored. 
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 1,000. 
[18] WAYNESBORO NURSERIES, 
