LOVETT'S NURSERY, LITTLE SILVER, N J.— Dewberries. Loganberry 



13 



DEWBERRIES 



Plants will be shipped by mail, provided cash 

 is sent for postage as per table. 



If to be staked, plant in rows four feet apart 

 each way; if to be mulched, plant in rows six 

 feet apart and the plants three feet apart in the 

 rows. 



LUCRETIA.— The standard dewberry. It 

 ripens in advance of the earliest blackberry 

 and equals in size the best varieties of its near 

 relative. Of slender trailing habit, the vines 

 are entirely hardy except at the far North, 

 succeed upon all soils (even very sandy) and 

 are exceedingly prolific. The berries are quite 

 long, of large size, sparkling jet black, of high 

 quality and very firm. Ships well, keeps well, 

 sells well. Dozen, 75c.: 100, $4.00; 1,000. $35.00. 

 Transplanted, dozen, $1.00; 100, $6.00; 1,000, 

 $50.00. 



AUSTIN'S IMPROVED.— The earliest dew- 

 berry and the first to ripen of the blackberry 

 family. The berries are large, nearly round 

 and of excellent quality. Ripening in advance 

 of Lucretia, it has proved a very profitable 

 variety to market growers. Dozen, 75c.; 100, 

 $4.00. 



LOGANBERRY 



The great merits of this unique fruit are now 

 well known. The berries are of great size — 

 equalling large blackberries, and are deep red- 

 dish maroon in color. In flavor, they are rich 

 and sprightly — a mingling of the raspberry and 

 blackberry, the raspberry predominating, mel- 

 low and refined, yet distinct from either — melt- 

 ing and without core. The flavor is so luscious, 

 novel and rich, the berry cannot fail to please 

 everybody as a dessert fruit. For canning it 

 is superior to all the other small fruits, and 

 for jellies and jams it has no equal. The canes 

 are of strong, vigorous growth, semi-trailing 

 in habit. What gives special value to this 

 novel fruit is its earliness — ripening as it does 

 at the close of the strawberry season, and in 



DEWBERRIES— A Delight to the Palate 



advance of all but the very earliest raspberries 



Selected tip plants, dozen, $3.00; 100, $20.00; 

 1,000, $175.00. Heavy transplanted plants, 

 dozen, $5.00; 100, $35.00 



A good word from Kansas: 



"I began testing out some of your new things a num- 

 ber of years ago and so far, think that your Caco grape 

 is preeminent as it has proven the most valuable general 

 crop grape that I have found among twenty-five or more 

 varieties growing in this locality. Drought, lack of culti- 

 vation, nor lack of fertilizers seem to seriously aflfect its 

 size, quality or productiveness, and it was easily the most 

 popular grape on . our market this Fall, and sold for 

 double the price of Concords." 



Otto Greef, Pittsburg. "Kas. 



YOU MAY GROW LOGANBERRIES LIKE THESE FROM THE STURDY PLANTS WE PROVIDE 



