24 J. T. LOVETT, INC., LITTLE .SILVER, N. J. -GARDEN ROOTS, APPLES 



RHUBARB (Pie Plant) 



Sometimes termed Wine 

 Plant. 



Plant in rows four feet 

 apart and the roots three 

 feet apart in the rows. 



MYATT'S LINNAEUS. 



• — Popular and the best va- 

 riety for general use. Stems 

 very large, tender, with re- 

 fined flavor. Is ready for 

 use early in the season, and 

 yields abundantly. Re- 

 quires less sugar than other 

 kinds. Each, 12c.; dozen, 

 $1.25; 100, $5.00. 



THYME (Thymus vulgaris) 



GARDEN.— Of dwarf habit, with exceed- 

 ingly pretty, small dark green leaves, formed 

 in a dense mass. Much prized for seasoning. 

 From 2^ inch pots, each, 12c.; dozen, $1.25; 

 100, $6.00. Clumps, each, 15c.; dozen, $1.50; 

 100, $8.00. 



SAGE 



HOLT'S MAMMOTH.— Forms a dense 

 mass a foot or more in height and 3 feet in 

 diameter, of large beautiful light green leaves 

 and produces spikes of light lilac-blue flowers 

 in late summer and autumn. Holt's Mammoth 

 is a great improvement upon the ordinary 

 garden sage, its leaves being four to five 



inches long, clean and perfect. They are held 

 well up from the soil, are rich in flavor and 

 of great substance. Perfectly hardy. 



From 2V2 inch pots, each, 12c.; dozen, $1.25; 

 100, $6.00; Clumps, each, 15c.; dozen, $1.50; 

 100, $8.00. 



FRUIT TREES 



These should be shipped by express or freight. Small shipments by express; heavier 

 shipments by freight. They are all too large for shipment by parcel post. 



In ordering berry plants, occasionally a party will add one, two or three fruit trees to 

 an important order for plants. Do not do this, for such an order is difficult to pack and the 

 trees unduly increase the size of the package, and, consequently, the express charges. In 

 addition to this, a package of just a few fruit trees is very liable to become damaged in tran- 

 sit — in a larger shipment, the trees form a solid, strong package which usually escapes the 

 terrors of the express and freight ''smashers." 



Do not conclude because our prices are so low that the stock we offer is not of strictly 

 first class quality. We beg leave to certify that all our fruit tree stock is of the very highest 

 grade — clean, bright, well branched and especially well rooted; and what is of still greater 

 importance, everything is strictly true to name. To buy stock of traveling agents, the cost 

 would be nearly or quite double our prices, the stock no better, if as good, and the risk of not 

 getting varieties not true to name very great. 



BANANA 



APPLES 



Plant 30 feet apart each way; 48 trees per 

 acre. 



FIRST CLASS, 6 to 8 ft., ^ inch caliper, 

 each. 40c.; dozen, $4.00; 100, $20.00. 



BALDWIN. — Early winter. Red; popular. 



BANANA (Winter Banana).— Late fall. 

 Beautiful waxen yellow with blush cheek, 

 large, very beautiful, highest quality. An 

 early and heavy bearer. Very valuable. (See 

 Cut.) 



BEN DAVIS (New York Pippin).— Winter. 

 Nearly all bright red. Of rather inferior 

 quality, extra good keeper; early and heavy 

 annual bearer. 



DELICIOUS.— Early winter. Red with 

 more or less deep yellow. Early and profuse 

 bearer. Of good size and the finest in quality 

 of all apples; truly delicious. This is indeed 

 a remarkable and very valuable apple. (See 

 Cut.) 



