Cbe ©rcbarb anb lkttcben=6art>en. 153 



black, large: Catawba, red, rather large; Delaware, light 

 red ; small : Moore*' Diamond, greenish-white, medium size; 

 Niagara, pale yellowish-green, bunch medium size, berry 

 large; Pocklington, yellow, rather large irregular bunches, 

 berry large. Grape-vines may be grown to cover a straight 

 walk in a kitchen-garden or for arbors. The soil should be 

 kept open and cultivated. 



Gooseberries. — Industry, dark red, hairy, very large; 

 Downing, whitish-green, large; Triumph, golden yellow, 

 rather large. Gooseberries are best grown for edging a 

 walk in the kitchen-garden or in open borders from three 

 to five feet apart. 



< hirrants. — Black: Black Naples, Black Champion; red: 

 Cherry, Fay's Prolific ; white or amber : White Grape. 



Blackbt rries. — Early Cluster, Lawton, Wilson Jr. Black- 

 berries may be grown in rough places on sunny slopes to 

 form a part of the garden scenery or for low hedges enclos- 

 ing the kitchen-siarden. 



Jiasph ni<_-<. — Champlain, whitish -amber ; Fontenoy, 

 purplish, red, late: Hornet, crimson, quite large; Cuthbert, 

 deep crimson: Golden Queen, amber; Marlboro, led, quite 

 early. Raspberries should be grown in beds in the kitchen- 

 garden ; they require cultivation. 



Strawberries. — Bubach, bright crimson, large, early; 

 Cumberland, rosy-red, large size; Haverland, light red oval. 

 early; Sharpless, rosy-red, very large. Strawberries should 

 be grown in beds in the kitchen-garden, planted in rows 

 and cultivated all summer. The little "Alpine Wood" 

 strawberry may be planted all over in the grass among the 

 trees in the orchard. 



