10 



j. T. LOVETT, INC., LITTLE SILVER, N. J. -RASPBERRIES 



RASPBERRIES 



Plants will be shipped by mail, provided cash is sent for postage as per table. 



TRANSPLANTED PLANT 



Plant the red or upright growing varieties in rows six feet apart and the plants three 

 feet apart in the rows, requiring 2,420 plants per acre; or four feet apart each way, if to be 

 grown in hills. (In the garden, plant four feet apart each way and restrict to hills, permit- 

 ting but three or four canes to remain in each hill.) In field culture, the cap varieties should be 

 planted in rows seven feet apart and the plants three and a half feet apart in the rows; in 

 garden culture, plant four feet apart each way. 



Please do not order less than six plants of a variety; a reliable test cannot be made with 

 a less number. 



BRILLIANT 



The brightest in color and the most beautiful of red Raspberries, as it is also the firmest. 

 It is the best red Raspberry for market as yet in commerce for many sections. The berries are 

 large, very uniform and of the brightest crimson imaginable; the canes are of ironclad hardi- 

 hood and prolific. It ripens in advance of the old Cuthbert by a week to ten days, but is not so 

 early as St. Regis. It is rapidly becoming popular and is sure to be largely planted in the 

 near future. Suckers, dozen, 50c.; 100, $2.00; 1,000, $15.00. Transplanted, dozen 75c.; 100, $3.00. 



CUTHBERT.— An old and well known vari- 

 ety, introduced by us in 1878. For twenty-five 

 years it was the most largely planted of all 

 red Raspberries and is still very popular. Ber- 

 ries of large size, deep crimson, moderately 

 firm and of high quality; being rich and 

 sprightly. Canes of strong growth with large 

 healthy foliage but not entirely hardy of late 

 years at the north, in winters of unusual se- 

 verity. Ripens in mid-season until late and 

 succeeds everywhere; even at the south. 

 Dozen, SOc; 100. $2.00; 1,000, $12.00. Trans- 

 planted, dozen. 75c.; 100, $3.00. 



