212 BUSn-FBUITS 



KECOMMENDED VARIETIES 



None of the English varieties can be recommended, 

 except to the amateur v^ho may wish to try them for 

 the home garden, and he may as v^ell be left to make 

 his own selections. 



V. UNCIvASSIFIED RASPBERRIES 



I have not been able to refer to their respective 

 classes with any degree of certainty the varieties men- 

 tioned in the following list. Most of them are little 

 known, many have passed out of cultivation, others 

 may be only synonyms for better -known names, and 

 a few are new. 



Allen. — See False Red Antwerp. 



Allen Bed Prolific. — Same origin as the Allen. Perhaps also 

 included under the False Red Antwerp. 



Barter. — Reported from California, by Professor E. J. Wickson, 

 as a large sized, vigorous, productive variety, first grown by Wil- 

 liam Barter, of Penryn, Placer county, Cal., to whom it was given 

 as a "foundling." Largely grown in the foot-hill regions of that 

 state.— Mich. Exp. Sta. Bull. Ill: 259. 



Beehive. — A variety introduced by Messrs. Winter & Co., of 

 the Linneean Botanic Garden, Flushing, N. Y. Fruit large, round, 

 red, ripe in July. — Amer. Gards. Asst. p. 194. 



Bronze Queen. — Mentioned as unproductive and only moderately 

 vigorous.— Mo. Exp. Sta. Bull. 13 (1891). 



Carleton. — Mentioned as on trial at the Experiment Station at 

 Agassiz, B. C. 



Chester — Mentioned by C. S. Malbone, of South Haven, Mich., 

 with Brandywine, as the best raspberries. — Fruit Grower's Journal, 

 April 1, 1893. 



Cincinnati Bed Antwerp. — Mentioned as grown in Wisconsin 

 about 1874.— Mich. Exp. Sta. Bull. Ill: 263. Perhaps the same 

 as False Red Antwerp. 



