The Best Trees you can fcup are the only ones ^ou can Afford to Plant 



2\ 



ORDER AT ONCE AND WE WILL BOOK FOR DELIVERY AT PROPER TIME THIS FALL 



GRAPES 



Ready for delivery November 1st to 20th 

 Ripening in the Order Given 

 PRICES.— Green Mountain and Campbell's Early, 

 1-year-size, 70 cents each; 3 for $1.80; 10 for $4.00; 



2 year size, 83 cents each; 3 for §2.25; 10 for $6.00. 

 All other varieties listed below, 1-year size, 58 cents 

 each; 3 for $1.20; 10 for $3.00; 2-year size, 70 cents each; 



3 for 51.80; 10 for $4.50, postpaid. 



See important notice on rates, opposite column. 



GREEN MOUNTAIN. An extra early greenish-white 

 grape; clusters and berry medium; thin skin; fine 

 quality; tender and sweet. Perfectly hardy. 



Lutie. The best family grape grown; never known to 

 rot. Bunches and berries large; color reddish choco- 

 late; very sweet. 



BRIGHTON. Berries medium to large, round, light 

 red to dark crimson in color, flesh tender; sweet and 

 productive. Of the highest quality. 



CAMPBELL'S EARLY. The most profitable of the 

 early grapes. Berry large, blackish purple, covered 

 with light blue bloom. Bunches large shouldered 

 quality excellent. 



CONCORD. The most popular grape in America 

 Bunch large, compact; berries very large; skin ten 

 der; flesh sweet, juicy. Vine a vigorous grower, 

 Very hardy and productive. Color blue-black. Sue 

 ceeds everywhere. 



NIAGARA. The standard market sort. Berries white, 

 large and handsome; bunch often shouldered. Vine 

 very vigorous and productive, succeeding well both 

 North and South. 



Maule's Family Grape Collection 



Six of the finest hardy Grapes described above 

 Ripening in the Order Given 

 One of each, GREEN MOUNTAIN, CAMPBELL'S 

 EARLY, LUTIE, BRIGHTON, CONCORD and 

 NIAGARA, in 1- year-old size for only $2.25, post- 

 paid; in 2-year-old size, the set of six choice hardy 

 Grapes as above for only $3.50, postpaid. 

 GREAT SATISFACTION AT VERY SMALL COST 



STRAWBERRIES 



Ready for Delivery About October 20th. We posi- 

 tively Cannot Make Deliveries Before That Time 



No Less Than 25 of a Variety Sold 

 An these strawberries $1.10 per 25, of one variety; 



$1.80 per 100 (which may be divided into 25 each of 



four varieties, if desired), postpaid. By express, not 



prepaid, $1.25 per 100; $12.00 per 1000. (Thousand 



lots may be divided into several varieties, if desired.) 



Seven Selected Varieties 



Ripening in the Order Given 



CAMPBELL'S EARLY. The earliest strawberry. 

 Bears a great crop of large, firm rich red berries. 

 Practically all berries are of uniform size and per- 

 fect shape and ripen all over; no green ends. Carry 

 well to distant markets. 



PREMIER. Leading growers claim it to be the best 

 early and best money maker of them all. Has no 

 weak points. An excellent shipper and also fine 

 for home garden. Begins to ripen early and con- 

 tinues well into midseason. 



SUCCESS. One cf the best berries grown for early 

 market and home use. 



SHARPLESS. Especially desirable in home gardens. 

 Large, excellent quality. Midseason. 



MARSHALL. One of the richest flavored berries 

 grown. Beautiful dark red. Midseason. 



JOE (Joe Johnson or Big Joe). Very large, medium 

 red, good quality. Especially adapted to poor, sandy 

 soil. Claimed by many to be the best for market 

 or home use. 



CHESAPEAKE. Finest late sort. Uniformly large 

 berry, excellent quality; large crop. Late. 



OUR ENTIRE SEASON 



Strawberry Plauit Offer 

 25 plants each of the above seven select straw- 

 berries, 175 plants in all, for only $2.50 postpaid. 

 Would cost you $3.15 if ordered at hundred rate. 



BLACKBERRIES 



Ready for delivery November 1st to 20th 

 See important notice on rates, below 

 All blackberries at these prices: 25 cents each; 3 for 

 60 cents; $1.75 per 10, postpaid. By express, not pre- 

 paid, $6.00 per 100; $40.00 per 1000. 



AMBROSIA. This is a grand new variety noted for 

 its great productiveness; siiigle plants have yielded 

 five quarts of fine well matured berries which were 

 larger in size than any other early variety. Fruit is 

 brilliant yet black in color, which it retains under all 

 conditions, is compact in structure and very firm 

 and uniform in size. Rich and luscious in flavor. 

 Has endured a temperature of 32 degrees below zero. 

 BLOWERS. An iron clad variety that never winter 

 kills; a mammoth, upright grower; enormously pro- 

 ductive. Fruit is large, glossy, firm and luscious. 

 Has proved to be extra good everywhere. 

 DALLAS. A new blackberry dewberry hybrid of great 

 worth which is proving to be one of the most valu- 

 able market sorts as well as one of the best for home 

 use. The cane is short, but very vigorous and pro- 

 ductive; perfectly hardy, will stand 14 degrees below 

 zero. The ripening season is early and the fruit 

 extra large and fine. Makes a grand companion for 

 the new McDonald listed below. Perfect flowering. 

 ELDORADO. Fruit large and of exceptional quality 



and productiveness. Late. 

 McDonald. This grand, new hybrid blackberry dew- 

 berry ripens very early; one week earlier than the 

 Lucretia dewberry. The canes trail the first year, 

 but are strong and upright from the second year on. 

 It is entirely hardy, has stood 14 degrees below zero, 

 and its drought resisting qualities are remarkable. 

 The large, extra fine fruit is of excellent quality. 

 The flower of this variety being pistillate, or imper- 

 fect, it should have a staminate, or perfect flowering 

 sort planted with it to pollinate; when thus polli- 

 nated, it is exceedingly productive. The Dallas black- 

 berry, listed above, which flowers at the same time, 

 is the best variety to plant (in the proportion of one 

 Dallas to each five McDonald) with it. 

 WARD. The best; fruit is very large; jet black and 

 of excellent quality. Productive, entirely free frona 

 rust. 



IMPORTANT 



Rates on Nursery Stock 

 Pages 20 and 21 



V/hen the "3-rate" is taken the three trees or 

 plants must be all one variety. You may order 5 

 trees or plants, all the same variety, at the "10 

 rate." In making up an order for ten trees or 

 plants you may divide into four different varieties. 

 Orders^ for fifty (except strawberries) may be di- 

 vided into five kinds of even tens of a kind, and 

 orders for one hundred into ten kinds of even tens 

 of a kind. 500 sold at the "1000 rate." Orders for 

 1000 may be divided into ten kinds. 



RASPBERRIES 



Ready for delivery November 1st to 20th 

 See important notice on rates, above 

 All raspberries at these prices: 25 cents each; 3 for 



60 cents; 10 for $1.70, postpaid. 



By express, not prepaid, $6.00 per 100; $40.00 per 1000. 

 Black Raspberries cannot be planted in the fall 



ST. REGIS EVERBEARING. Unlike any other rasp- 

 berry it bears a crop the first season. Plants of it 

 set out in early April gave ripe berries June 20th of 

 the same year. For four weeks thereafter the yield 

 was heavy and the canes continued to produce ripe 

 fruit without intermission until the middle of Octo- 

 ber. The berries were large and beautiful, firm and 

 full flavored to the very last. Berries are of large 

 size, surpassing quality, rich, sugary, with full rasp- 

 berry flavor and bright crimson in color. 



KING OF THE MARKET. A new everbearing rasp- 

 berry of great worth. The plant is upright, stalky 

 and very productive, outyielding any other variety, 

 even the purple sorts. First bearing season lasts 

 through June and July and by September the young 

 canes begin bearing again and continue until stopped 

 by freezing weather. Berry beautiful light crimson, 

 very meaty, rich in sugar and delicious in flavor. 

 Fruit is twice the size of St. Regis and about a week 

 later ripening in both the spring and fall seasons. 



CUTHBERT. A strong grower and productive; very 

 large, bright red; fruit firm, of very fine quality; 

 season medium to very late. 



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