BEARS THE FIRST SEASON. 



Unlike any other Raspberry, the St. Regis 

 yields a crop of fruit the season it is planted. Plants 

 of it planted in early April gave ripe berries on 

 June 20th of the same year. For four weeks there- 

 after the yield was heavy and the canes continued 

 to produce ripe fruit freely without intermission, 

 until the middle of October. The berries were 

 large and beautiful, firm and full flavored to the 

 very last. 



PRICE OF STRONG WELL ROOTED 

 PLANTS. 



Each 25c.; 5 for $1.00; 12 for $2.00; 30 



for $8.00; 100 for $15.00. ^ 



(By mail postpaid at each and dozen rates.) s-rr»r&is ► 



Prices for 500 and 1,000 lots given by letter. 

 The Raspberry for the Million and the Millionaire. "There's millions in 



WHAT OTHERS SAY OF THE ST. REGIS RASPBERRY 



Extract from Report of Special Fruit Committee, New Jersey State Horticultural So- 

 ciety. 



The St. Regis Everbearing Raspberry is truly a wonder and marks a great advance 

 in red Raspberries. The bernes are of good, though not extra large size, are bright in 

 color, very firm and of quality that equals the old Cuthbert. Its distinguishing character- 

 istics are its remarkable vigor of plant and its everbearing property. It is the first red 

 raspberry to ripen, giving ripe bernes the past season on June 20th and continue to yield, 

 without intermission, until late October; and its summer and autumn crops do not consist 

 of a few scattering berries, but good to heavy pickings all the time. One party who had 

 a small patch — say half an acre — picked and shipped from it two or three pickings each 

 week for four months and his profits were enormous. The berries in late summer and au- 

 tumn do not differ perceptably in size, color or quality from those that ripen in June. 



The last fruit that we picked of the St. Regis was on November 7th at which time 

 the plants were in full foliage; although previous to this the mercury had registered 28° 



On September 30th we saw some nice looking red raspberries on exhibition at 

 the Interstate Fair at Trenton, N. J. They had just come from bushes and looked 

 as fresh and luscious as early summer berries. The variety is called the St. Regis 

 Everbearing and it was exhibited by J. T. Lovett, Little Silver, N. J. Farm Journal, 

 (Dec, 1910.) 



Jewell Co., Kansas, Dec. 19, 1910. In the Red Raspberry, St. Regis Ever- 

 bearing you have one of the most wonderful raspberries I have ever tested. I got plants 

 of St. Regis from you last spring and they all grew and done well. There were nice 

 berries on it all summer. J. P. Leaf. 



Grundy Co., Iowa, Dec. 23, 1910. The St. Regis Raspberry from you all 

 grew; they were nice, clean, healthy plants. The canes were heavily loaded; the size, 

 color and quality of the fruit was O. K. H. Rockhill. 



