THE LOVETT COMPANY, LITTLE SILVER, N. J. 



GENERAL LIST. 



Childs' Everbearififf Tree or Topsy. Large, fine 

 flavored and productive; strong, upright 

 grower of tree form. Early and contin- 

 ues long in bearing. _ _ . _ 

 Crystal White. Medium, translucent white, 



sweet, pleasant; productive. Early. 

 Early Harvest. Medium, glossy black, sweet; 



canes rather tender, very productive. 

 Early Kin?. Large, black, fine flavor; hardy, 



productive. Fine for home use. 

 Erie. Large, roundish, good quality ; hardy, 



productive, popular. Second early. 

 Kittatinny. Large, delicious; strong grower, 

 productive but rather tender. Midseason. 

 Lawton. Large, fine quality, hardy and produc- 

 tive. Midseason to late. 

 CHILDS' EVERBEARING TREE. WaAwell. One of the finest. Large, sw^eet rich 



and without core; vigorous, hardy and productive. Earliest of all. 



Ofimer. Large, firm, sweet and rich; very hardy, vigorous, productive. A fine late sort. ' - 

 Snyder. Medium to large, sweet; very hardy, and exceedingly productive. Early. 

 Taylor's Prolific. Medium to large, fine quality; very hardy, productive. Midseason to late. 

 Wilson's Early. Large, productive, profitable. A popular market sort. Early. 

 Wilson Junior. An improvement upon the preceding, very similar, but everyway better. Early. 



DEWBERRY. 



Plant in rows six feet apart with the plants three feet distant in the rows. Keep the soil mellow 

 Lucretia. The best variety. Large, jet black, melting, delicious. Earlier than Early Harvest 

 and larger than Erie. ' Doz., 50c; 100, 11.50; 1000, $12.00. 



DWARF R0C¥Y~M0UNTAIN CHERRY. 



Of all the fruit introduced from the "West this 

 appears to be the most valuable. It is as hardy 

 as an oak, having withstood a temperature of 

 forty degrees below zero, unharmed. It is one 

 of the most productive of all fruits, sixteen 

 quarts of fruit having been picked from off a 

 three-years-old bush. The illustration here giv- 

 en, which is from a photograph of a branch, will 

 give some idea of its productiveness. The fruit 

 is jet black when fully ripe, averages somewhat 

 larger than the Enghsh Morello, its season of 

 ripening being after all others are gone. In 

 quality and flavor it is akin to the sweet cher- 

 ries, excellent in flavor and a pleasant fruit for 

 eating out of hand. 



Ea., 20c; 3 for 50c; doz., $1.50; 100, $10.00, 

 {by mail, if desired) . 



23 



Doz. 100 1000 



75 



$5 00 





50 



2 00 





40 



1 00 



$7 00 



rrn 



2 00 



15 00 



50 



2 00 



15 00 



40 



1 50 



10 00 



40 



1 50 



10 00 



50 



200 



15 00 



50 



2 00 



15 00 



40 



1 00 



8 00 



50 



1 50 



10 00 



50 



1 50 



10 00 



50 



1 50 



10 00 



and clean. 

 Blackberry 



ELAEAGNUS. 



Elaeasnus longipes. A beautiful hardy shrub from Japan. It grows from five to six 

 feet high, making a weU-branched bush of great beauty; leaves lougish-oval, bright green 

 above and silvery-white beneath. The blossoms appear in May, in great profusion. The 

 berries are ripe early in July and are oval in shape, like an olive, and about the size 

 shown in the illustration, bright scarlet, and very abundant. Like cranberries, the fruit 

 requires cooking, and may be used in the same manner. 



The true longipcs is a dense, bushy grower, which begins to bear fruit when about 

 two years old and only two feet high. With this has been confused another variety, 

 umbcllatus, which is a vigorous-growing, willowy shrub that often grows to a height of 

 ten feet without bearing fruit. The true longipes is the variety we offer. Ea., 20c; 3 

 for 50c; doz., $1.50 {by mail, if desired). 



