228 State Horticultural Society. 



County. Name. Addres's. Fruits. 



Greene Mrs. Hancock, Springfield — Plum: Wild Goose. 



L. F. Hilt, Springfield- — Plum : AVild Goose. 



A. W. Howell, Springfield — IJlackberry : Taylor. 



Mr. Hefferman, Springfield— Gooseberry : Industry. 



f, 

 Mr. McCullough, Springfield — Plum : Newman. 



Mr. Milligan, Springfield — Apple : Transparent. 



O. H. Mitchell, Springfield— Apples : Benoni, Queen of the West, liellHower. 



Mr. O. Neal, Republic — Plum : AVild Goose. 

 I M. It. Norman, Brookline — Peach : Elberta. 



J Walter Nash, Springfield — Blackberry : Kittatiny. 



I H. H. Park, Springfield- Apples : Red June, lied Astraclmn, Transparent. 



1 I Seedling ; crab ; Transcendent ; pear : Kieffer ; 



' peaches : Elberta, Champion, Seedling ; 



grapes : Worden, Concord, Elvira, Delaware. 



Geo. Sclileifer, Springfield — I'each : Susquehannah. 



Mr. Savage, Springfield — Peach : Seedling. 



Mrs. Stuart, Springfield — Blackberries : Lawton. White. 



G. T. Tippin, Nichols — Peaches : Elberta, Champion. 



H. Theime, Springfield — Grapes : Hicks, Virginia, Delaware, Brighton, 



Campbell's Early, Cynthiana, Goethe, Colum- 

 bian, Green Mt., Uncle Sam, Niagara, Wood- 

 ruff, Clinton. 



Mrs. W. Witte, Springfield — Blackberry : Snyder. 



W. T. Zink, Springfield — Gooseberry : Keepsake. 



Lawrence B. Logan, Logan — Apple: Maiden Blush. 



Newton Louis Zellner, Grauby. 



Stone W. E. Short, Indian Peach. 



Texas L. Southworth, Sargent — Apple: ilaideu Blush. 



.Wright Geo. Kiser, Mansfield — I'eaches : Mt. Rose, Elberta. 



FUTURE WORK FOR THE WORLD'S FAIR. 



This work will be the great burden which every State society 

 seems ready to take up for the next year, and the success of our State 

 exhibit will depend upon how w^ell and faithfully w'C do our part next 

 year in sending these fruits to the building just as fast as they ripen. 

 We shall want abundance of them, not berries by the box, but berries 

 by the crate, yes by the hundreds of crates daily, and then for straw- 

 berry day a car load of strawberries packed in pint boxes for exhibition 

 purposes and to give away to every visitor on strawberry day. We shall 

 want fifty crates to lOO crates of strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, 

 cherries, plums, currants and gooseberries every day as long as they 

 last. We shall be glad to see these come from an hundred different 

 towns or counties and not all from a few localities. 



We shall want loo crates of peaches daily, 40 boxes of early ap- 

 ples, 50 baskets of grapes, 20 cases of plums. During peach season 

 we shall want two peach days, one at Elberta time and one at Sahvay 



