LOVETT'S NURSERi^, LITTLE SILVER, N.j.— RASPBERRIES 



7 



The Choicest Among RASPBERRIES 



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



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. 



ST. REGIS EVERBEARING OR 



RANERE Undoubtedly the most dependable 

 of all the Everbearing sorts known to date! 



A unique red Raspberry, and, all things con- 

 sidered, the most valuable one that has ap- 

 peared in the last quarter of a century. It was 

 introduced by us in 1910 and by sheer merit 

 has forged ahead by leaps and bounds, until 

 it now stands at the top of the list of red 

 varieties. The berries, though not of largest 

 size, are bright red and of excellent quality. It 

 ripens very earh^ — in advance of all other red 

 varieties — and the canes, in addition to being 

 very drought-resistant, are exceedingly prolific. 



Besides giving an immense crop in summer, 

 it also gives an autumn crop, continuing to 

 produce perfect berries in generous quantity 

 until the ground freezes. Unlike most other 

 Raspberries, it yields a moderate crop of ber- 

 ries the first season if planted in early spring. 



St. Regis sends up suckers or young plants 

 excessively, and unless these are kept down (to 

 a single row of plants or three to four plants 

 to the hill), with hoe or otherwise, treating the 

 surplus ones as weeds, the crop of fruit will be 

 small, both in quantity and size of the berries. 



Selected sucker plants, dozen, $1.00; 100, 

 $3.50; 1,000, $25.00. Transplanted plants, dozen. 

 $1.50; 100, $6.00: 1.000. $50.00. Heavy fruiting 

 plants, dozen, $3.00; 100, $15.00. 



WHITE QUEEN (Everbearing) 



Since the introduction of our sensational St. 

 Regis Everbearing Raspberry several years 

 ago, there have been introduced a great many 

 new sorts, almost all of which were claimed 

 to be superior to that good old sort, but these 

 claims have proved, almost invariably, to have 

 been made without regard to facts. We have, 

 however, in White Queen a beautiful white 

 fruited variety which in certain respects is 

 actually an improvement upon St. Regis. It is 

 tremendously productive, even more so, we be- 

 lieve, than St. Regis; its fruit is also, if any- 

 thing, larger and its quality simply superb. The 

 fruit of _ White Queen served with the fruit of 

 St. Regis or other red-fruited variety is surely 

 a delight to the eye and a real treat to the 

 inner man. To this remarkable new Everbear- 

 ing variety, after a thorough test, we give our 

 unqualified endorsement. Selected Sucker 

 plants, dozen, $3.50: 100. $25.00. 



^r. M. Adams. Oradell, X. J., writes on Time 2. 1922. 

 as follows : 



"The Raspberry St. Regis 24 plants received from you 

 this spring, are now in full bud, not one died, despite a 

 heavy freeze following night of setting out. I have never 

 seen better growth on recently set plants, and I am well 

 pleased with these." 



