Luscious Strawberries 
~ ROCKHILL NO. 24 
When you have tasted one of these huge 
honey-sweet berries, you will say that it 
is just about the best strawberry you’ve 
ever eaten. It’s an ideal home variety 
because it produces fruit continually un- 
til late fall. You almost never find a run- 
ner so. peak production continues for 
many seasons. The lack of runners makes 
the plants expensive to produce, but they 
are worth it. The best strawberry for 
growing in jars or barrels. fi 
10 for $2.50; 25 for $5.00: a 
100 for $15.00. 
DONNER 
Developed by the hybridists at the 
University of California. The color 
is rich, size uniform, and it has a 
particularly delicious sweet straw- 
berry flavor. Ripens good crops— 
even in its first year. 
25 for $2.00; 100 for $6.25. 
Cherries on Bushes 
All you need to enjoy home grown cherries is one 
of these handsomely foliaged shrubs, small enough 
to fit into any sunny garden corner. Tiny white cherry 
blossoms line each limb in the spring and the crops 
of fine quality cherries ripen in midsummer. Any- 
where in the country, cold or hot, the vigorous plants 
grow and fruit regularly. 
Either variety, bare root, $3.75 ea.; 
10 or more, same variety, $3.35 ea., postpaid. 
. 
‘“ Korean Cherry No. 20 Grows to about 5 or 6 feet. 
The excellent fruit has just enough tartness to make 
this best for pies or preserves. Does best if No. 60 
is planted nearby for cross pollination. 
Bare root plants, 2 to 2\% feet. 
Korean Cherry No. 60 Smaller (3 to 4 feet). The large 
fruit is deep maroon, sweet and richly flavored. 
Bare root plants, 11% to 2 feet. 
SPECIAL CHERRY OFFER 
One plant each of No. 20 and 
No. 60—Plant both kinds for S 75 
better crops. 
1 
For delivery in California, 
ome eres 
please add 3% State sales tax. Postpaic 
37 
