LEAMON G. TINGLE, PITTSVILLE, MD. II 



ILOWERS BLACKBERRY— Productive and Hardy 



BLACKBERRIES 



Blackberries are among the best known and most 

 valued of our berries. No fruit of any kind is more 

 wholesome. A liberal use of berries and other good fruit 

 will save doctors' bills. Blackberries should be planted 

 in rows six or seven feet apart, three or four feet in the 

 row. Keep the ground light, rich and clean, and pinch 

 the canes back when they have reached four feet in 

 height. The demand for blackberries is always good. 



10 cents each; $1.25 for 25; $3.50 per 100; $25 per 1000. 



EARLY HARVEST. One of the earliest, berry medium sized. 

 good quality and very prolific; firm and attractive in appear- 

 ance. A good market sort. 



ELDORADO. Vino is vigorous and hardy; berries are very 

 large, black, borne in clusters; ripens well together; sweet, 

 melting and pleasing to the taste. 



MESEREAU. Largo, oval, sparkling black, sweet, rich and 

 melting, hardy and productive. 



BLOWERS. In this we have a large productive and hardy 

 blackberry. Blowers is a sturdy grower (the canes, if un- 

 checked, attain a height of ten to twelve foot on fertile soil). 

 It yields very heavily and for a long soason. The fruit is hand- 

 some as well as large, and is of sujierb quality. Us canes have 

 endured a temperature of twenty degrees below zero unharmed, 

 and It has yielded at the rate of 280 bushels per acre. 



LAWTON. The well-known market variety. Large, oval, 

 black, juicy, sweet. 



DEWBERRIES 



50 cents for 10 



$1.00 for 25; 

 $25 per 1000. 



$3.00 for 100; 



LUCRETIA. I'^xtromely productive of berries as large as the 

 largest blackberries, ripens 2 weeks before blackberries. Dew- 

 berries are same as blackberries, except vines of dewberries run 

 on the ground while blackberry canes grow up. 



