LOVETT'S NUItSERY :: LITTLE SILVER, N. J. 



June Bearing Straw- 

 berries — continued 



Pot-grown plants, 

 $1.00 per doz., $7.0( 



per 



, $7.00 

 100, except as 

 noted. 



EATON. Of remark- 

 able size, excellent in ' 

 color, of superior flavor, 

 and possesses every 

 characteristic to make 

 it one of the really- 

 worth while Strawberries 

 introduced to date. It 

 yields large berries in 

 greatest profusion and Eaton 

 their dark red color easily makes them one of the most 

 desirable for canning. $1.25 per doz., $8.00 per 100. 



GANDY 



Almost every berry grower knows this old and trusted 

 friend. It was introduced by us 34 years ago and has been 

 largely grown ever since. The texture is of the firmest and 

 the color a bright flame. After picking, this bright color re- 

 mains until decay. Although the berries are large to very 

 large, the flavor is rather acid and not of the highest quality. 

 After a third of a century of service it is still one of the 

 finest late sorts in cultivation. (Illustrated on page 22.) 



GLEN MARY. Still retains its popularity, especially 

 throughout the Middle and New England States, where it does 

 best. Because of its superb quality and tremendous pro- 

 ductivity, it is, without doubt, one of the most satisfactory 

 varieties to grow, especially in the home garden. Should be 

 planted near some good pollenizer such as Joe. 



HOWARD NO. 17. A good second early, bearing good- 

 sized berries over a long season; an intensely strong grower, 

 with large, beautifully colored berries of uniformly high quality. 



HUNDRED DOLLAR. A very valuable midseason vari- 

 ety. The plant is a strong, vigorous grower and among the 

 most prolific. The berries, which are hardly firm enough for 

 distant shipment, average very large indeed; the color is 

 bright scarlet and the quality mild, sweet and luscious. 

 There are indeed few varieties more valuable for nearby^mar- 

 kets or for the home garden. 



You Should Know the 

 Great Van Fleet Hybrid 

 Strawberries about which 

 Rev. Merritt Miller, £jjf.v 

 Co.. N.Y., wrote as follows: 



"I tried out the Early 

 Jersey Giant and the Ed- 

 mund Wilson a few years 

 ago. They are fine berries. 

 I want to put out a bed in 

 August and want to put out 

 potted plants. The Early 

 Jersey Giant is a fine early 

 berry, the earliest in this sec- 

 tion where I grew them (Dun- 

 dee, N. Y.) and the largest 

 early berry I have ever seen. 

 The Edmund Wilson is a fine, 

 rich-flavored berry." 



Howard 

 No. 17 



Van Fleet Hybrids are 

 described and illus- 

 trated on pages 9-11. 



18 



