DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE. 



139 



Cetawayo (p). — Berries large, irregular in shape, and 

 said to be wonderfully productive. 



Mt. Vernon. — A large, late, very productive variety; 

 a strong, healthy grower, with strong fruit stalks ; fruit 

 conical, bright red, uniformly large and of excellent 

 quality. 



Golden Defiance.— Large ; beautiful, bright scarlet ; 

 of good quality ; very productive ; late to very late, 



Huddleston's Favorite. — Large size ; beautiful 

 shape ; bright, glossy crimson ; firm, with a rich, spicy 

 flavor. An excellent shipping berry. 



Hervey Davis.— Fruit very large, holding its size 

 well to the last. Deep, glossy red, ripening perfectly, 

 and of the highest flavor. 



Sucker State.— Fruit medium to large, regular shape, 

 conical, but not pointed ; color somewhat like Cumber- 

 land Triumph, but darker. 



Springdale. — Very large ; dark crimson ; of excellent 

 quality, exceedingly productive and vigorous. 



GENERAL COLLECTION. 



Price ID cents each ; 30 cents per 10 ; $2.00 per 100, 



Cumberland Triumph. — A magnificent variety; 

 berries immense, fine, perfect form, and of fine flavor]; 

 plant very vigorous and productive. 



Crescent Seedling.— Large, conical, quite uniform 

 in size and shape ; bright scarlet, moderately firm, a re- 

 markable grower, and considered the most productive 

 variety grown, one grower having picked 346 bushels to 

 the acre : will bear more neglect than any other, taking 

 ■entire possession of the ground to the exclusion of weeds. 

 It appears at home alike in all soils. 



Chas. Downing. — Fruit medium to large, conical ; 

 deep scarlet, fine flavor, productive. 



Glendale. — So far. the best late market berry that 

 has been tested ; plant very thrifty, with tell, rank foli- 

 age, and very productive ; succeeds well on both light 

 and heavy soils ; fruit of large size, regular, uniform, 

 conical, bright scarkt color ; fair quality ; very firm, be- 

 ing fully equal to Wilson in shipping and keeping qual- 

 ities. 



Iowa Prolific. — A new variety from Iowa, large and 

 prolific, and of good quality. 



Jucunda. — A strawberry of the largest size, high col- 

 or, holding its fruit well up on the vines ; bringing the 

 highest price in market. 



Kentucky. — A strong, vigorous, productive variety, 

 bearing its berries well up from the ground ; fruit large, 

 bright scarlet : firm, juicy, rich and sweet. 



Monarch of the West. 



Monarch of the 'West. — This is a well tested and 

 truly v/orthy variety \ will grow on most any good soil ; 

 stands drought and wet ; berry very large, firm and of 

 most delicious tjuality. 



Seneca Chief. — Very large, conical ; dark crimson ; 

 firm, very good, late ; productive and vigorous 



Sharpless. — With the exception of President Lin- 

 coln, the largest berry of the entire collection, and has 

 maintained its high reputation for vigor of plant size of 

 berry, flavor and productiveness ; flesh firm, sweet, with 





Sharpie; 



a delicate aroma ; of first quality ; color clear, light red, 

 with a smooth, shining surface, 



Wilson'.s Seedling.— One of the most productive 

 and profitable varieties for market culture. 



ADDITIONAL LIST. 



Price ID cents each ; 40 cents per 10 ; $3.00 per 100. 



Black Defiance. — A splendid sort, one of the best ; 

 very large, fine, perfect form, and fine flavor ; a luxuri- 

 ant grower, and productive, 



Capt. Jack. — A most vigorous grower, healtay and 

 productive ; berries large, handsome and solid. 



Col. Cheeney (p). — Large, roundish ovate ; bright 

 scarlet ; flesh rather firm ; fine quality. 



Cinderella. — Large, conical, regularly formed, bright 

 glossy scarlet, mild, rich, aromatic, vigorous and pro- 

 ductive ; very fine for home use. 



Forest Rose. — An excellent variety ; large and harfd- 

 some, of the Jucunda type. 



Great American. — Very large, if given the highest 

 cultivation, but not profitable on poor soil. Ripens late. 



Longfellow. — A variety from Kentucky ; large, late, 

 firm berries. 



Michigan Seedling. — A good sized berry, ripening 

 a week or ten days later than Wilson's. 



Marvin. — A cross of Jucunda with Wilson, resem- 

 bling to a certain extent both, although distinct from 

 either, a berry of extraordinary promise, being one of 

 the very latest in ripening. 



Pioneer. — Very early, of large size, bright red ; flesh 

 firm, and of excellent quality. 



President Wilder. — Plant a vigorous, healthy grow- 

 er very productive ; fruit large, roundish, quite regu- 

 lar, bright crimson scarlet, firm, juicy, sweet and rich. 



President Lincoln.— One of the largest berries in 

 cultivation , rich, dark color and fine quality. The size 

 is really immense, irregular in form. The originator 

 claims to have measured berries 10 to 11 inches in cir- 

 cumference. It requires rich soil and high culture. 



