134 



M 



F E R RY & GO'S 



Persons sending $10.00 may select 

 " " 15.00 " 



" " 20.00 " 



rticles valued at$i2.oo 



25.C0 



Mailing Club Rates.— Postage prepaid by us: 

 Persons sending ga.oo may select articles valued at $2.20 



'■'■ " 4.00 " " " 4.50 



*'" " 6.00 " '^ " 7.00 



"■ " 8.00 " " " 9.50 



And for all amounts remitted above $20, twenty-five per cent, may be added to order, purchaser's choice from 

 catalogue or dollar collections. 



Express Clubbing Rates. — Transportation charges paid by the purchaser 

 Persons sending $2.00 may select articles valued at $2.40 



'*■ ^" 4.00 '' " " 5.00 



" " 6.00 "■ "■ '^ 8.00 



Persons sending .$10.00 may select articles valued at $14.00 

 1,5.00 " " '' 22.00 



^o 00 " " *' 30.00 



And for all amounts remitted above $20.00, fifty per cent, may be added to order, purchaser's choice from cata- 

 logue or dollar collections. 



Individual orders for any of the preceding amounts will be entitled to the 5ame premium as club orders. 

 I>OI^I^_4.It COI^3L.3ECTiO]VS 



Of trees and plants of suitable size to be sent by mail, postage paic by us. Our selection of sorts, all labeled. Per- 

 sons wishing their choice of sorts, will please order at the single rates hich accompany the descriptions. 



Set 41 — 8 Apple trees, 4 sorts, $1.00. 

 " 42—3 Pear trees, 3 sorts, $1,00. 

 " 43 — 3 Cherry trees, 3 sorts, $1.00. 

 " 44 — 2 Pear, 2 sorts, 2 Quince, 2 sorts, $1.00. 

 " 45 — 6 Peach trees, 3 sorts, $1.00. 

 " 46 — I Pear, 2 Peach, 2 Apple, $1.00. 

 " 47—1 Apple, I Pear, i Cherry, i Quince, .$i.co. 

 " 48 — 8 Grape vines; 2 each of Concord, Hartford, 



Ives and Rodgers' Hybrids, $1.00. 

 " 49 — 10 Grape vines; 5 sorts, entirely our choice, $1.00 

 ** 50—20 Raspberries; 4 each of Mammoth Cluster, 



Doolittle's Improved, Brandywine, Philadelphia 



and Turnei-, $1.00. 

 " 51 — 25 Raspberries ; 5 sorts, our choice exclusively, 



$1.00. 

 '* 52 — 8 Currants ; 2 Cherry, 3 La Versailles and 3 



White Grape, $1.00. 



Set 53 — 50 awberry plants ; 10 Monarch of the West, 

 10 Crescent Seedling, 20 Wilson's Albany and 10 

 Chas. Downing, $1.00. 



'^ 54 — 50 Strawberry plants ; 20 Sharpless, 10 Col. 

 Cheney, 10 Glendale, 10 President Wilder, $1.00. 



'' 55 — 40 Sharpless Strawberry plants, fruit immensely 

 large, $i.co. 



" 56 — 2 Grapes, ^ Currants, 4 Raspberries, 20 Straw- 

 berry plants, $1.00. 



" 57 — 5 Sweet Chestnut, i Spanish Chestnut, i But- 

 ternut, I Black Walnut, i Madeira Nut, $1.00. 



" 58 — 100 Catalpa Speciosa ; perfectly hardy, rapid 

 growler, ver>' durable timber, $1.00. 



" 59 — 40 Sweet Chestnut trees, $1.00. 



" 60 — 5 Norway Spruce, 3 to 4 inches high, i Ame-i- 

 can Arbor Vitae, i Pyramidal Arbor Vitae. i ;i. '\ 

 Juniper, i Scotch Pine, i Retinospora, $i.oc. 



S^~We have frequent letters of inquiry, similar to the following : " In your set of 10 Grape vines for a dollar, 

 please let me know what sorts you send ; also, in your set of 25 Raspberry plants for $1.00, what varieties do you 

 send?" In reply to all such inquiries, permit us to say, that we are only enabled to offer so large a number for a 

 dollar by retninitig the privilege of selecting the varieties when ive 'fill the order ^ and this excludes the possibili- 

 ty of naming in advance of filling the orders, what varieties will be used. But all sets will be filled with good sorts, 

 such as are described in our catalogues. In sets where the varieties are named, those of course will always b" -.ent. 



^2SIOE3 LIST 



Of Articles that can toe Sent to any part of the United States by MaiL 



With the return of another year we have the pleasure of offering you many new and rare varieties of fruits, and 

 althocigh we cannot expect that every variety in the list will make a world-wide renown for itself, yet we have rea- 

 son to hope that many of them will be so superior to the older sorts ripening at the same time, as to displace them 

 from our catalogue. It is only through the introduction of new kinds that we can hope to arrive at perfection, 

 which should be the aim of every cultivator of fruit. For want of space, we regret that we cannot give description - 

 of varieties m. full. 



APPLES— Standard. 



Plant 30 feet apart each way ; 48 trees to the a";re. 

 One year grafts finely rooted, cut back suitable for mail- 

 ing. 15 c-rnts each ; 8 for $i.ao, purcliaser's choic A 

 the £o.llou:Lng : 



SUMMER. 



Benoni, Kesv/ickCodlin, 



Early Harvest, Red Astrachan, 



Early Strawberry, Sops of Wine, 



Golden Sweet, Sweet Bough, 



H<slla.ad Pippin, "Western Beauty. 



AUTlTIiIN. 



Fall Pippin, 



Auturmn Swaar, 



Autumn Strawberry, 



Buckingham, 



Colvert, 



Cayuga F.ed Streak, 



Fall Jenetting, 



Gravenstein, 

 Maiden's Blush, 

 Sherwood's Favorite, 

 St. Lawrence, 

 Trumbull Sweet. 



Ben Davis, 

 Bailey's Sweet, 

 Belmont, 

 Baldwin, 



BeliHower Yellow, 

 Dominie, 

 Dutch Mignonne, 

 Fallawater, 

 Fameuse, 

 Grimes' Golden, 

 Golden Russet, 

 H. Nonsuch, 

 King(of Tomp. Co.). 

 Limber Twig, 

 Lady Apple, 

 Monmouth Pippin, 



WINTER. 



Northern Spy, 

 Peck's Pleasant 

 Paradise Sweet, 

 Rome Beauty, 

 Russet Roxbury, 

 R. I, Greening, 

 Rawles' Janet, 

 Rambo, 



Ribston Pippin^ 

 Seek-no-Further- 

 Stark, 



Talman Sweet, 

 Vandevere, 

 White Pippin, 

 Wagener. 



