212 BUSH-FRUITS 



RECOMMENDED VARIETIES 



None of the English varieties can be recommended, 

 except to the amateur who may wish to try them for 

 the home garden, and he may as well be left to make 

 his own selections. 



V. UNCLASSIFIED 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 Bed Antwerp. 



Allen Red Prolific. Same origin as the Allen. Perhaps also 

 included under the False Bed 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 Linnsean 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. 



