16 
Catalogue and Retail Price List of 
Select Grapes — Continued 
ELVIRA — Pale Green, Late — Very vigorous and extremely productive. 
Bunch and berry medium and very compact; one of the best white wine grapes. 
10c each, $1.00 per dozen, $8.00 per 100, 2-year No. 1. T 
POCKLINGTON — White, Very Large and Showy — Vine very hardy and vig- 
orous. Bunch and berry large. Ripens about with Concord, and is better in 
quality. 10c each, $1.00 per dozen, $8.00 per 100, 2-year No. 1. 
NIAGARA — White — Quality about like (and ripens soon after) Concord. 
$1.00 per dozen, $8.00 per 100, 2-year No. 1. 
Write for Prices on Other Varieties of Graces. 
IMPROVED DWARF JIINEBBRRY — A splendid fruit for pies or canning. 
Perfectly hardy and never fails to bear. Fruit resembles the blueberry; borne 
In attractive clusters; bluish black; about the size of good big Houghton 
gooseberries; blossoms white. Should be In every garden. 20c each, $1.80 
per dozen. 
Gooseberries 
Champion. 
As to soil, cultivation, etc., all we have 
said concerning the currant applies to the 
gooseberry. Who, that is acquainted with 
its different uses and knows the delights of 
a erood gooseberry pie. would ever again 
willingly be without this most wholesome of 
fruits? 
HOUGHTON — Medium size, pale red, quite 
sweet and enormously productive. This we 
regard as our stand-by. Has the genuine 
gooseberry flavor. 10c each, $1.00 per dozen, 
$8.00 per 100. 
DOWNING — Fruit nearly twice as large 
as Houghton. Flesh whitish green, soft, 
juicy and good. Lacks the genuine goose- 
berry flavor of the above. Plant vigorous; 
one of the best. Price, 2-year No. 1, 10c each, 
$1.00 per dozen, $9.00 per 100. 
CHAMPION — About as large as Down- 
ing; enormously productive; never known to 
mildew; one of the very best sorts for home 
use or market. "I never saw a gooseberry 
that will compare with the Champion one 
year with another, and all things considered." 
— Prof. J. L. Budd, Iowa Horticultural Re- 
port. 1897. 2-year, medium, 15c each, $1.50 
per dozen, $10.00 per 100. 
JOSSELYN — (Red Jacket) — A new berry which Is likely soon to take first 
place; large as the largest; berry smooth, very hardy and prolific; has recently 
bene re-named in honor of its introducer, Mr. Josselyn. Price, 2-year No. 1, 15c 
each. $1.50 per dozen, $10.00 per 100. 
Select Currants 
Currants should be planted in good, very fertile soil, with liberal manur- 
ing, and the tops should be cut back nearly to the crown, allowing only three 
or four canes to grow the first year. Plant In rows five or six feet apart and 
three feet in the row. Prune more or less every year to get rid of the oid 
wood and keep the bushes open. Currant worms should be vigilantly looked 
for in spring and summer. These worms can be destroyed by white hellebore, 
one ounce to three gallons of water, and apply with a sprinkling can. Be 
sure and use the remedy as soon as or before the worms appear. The currant 
Is well adapted to our soil and climate, and everyone should have a liberal sup- 
