14 
SUNSET SEED AND PLANT CO. 
Grape Vines 
Foreign Varieties. Price, 20 cents each, $1.00 per 10. Black Ferrara, Black Morocco, California or 
Mission, Cornichon, Flame Tokay, Muscat of Alexandria, Muscat Hamburg, Rose of Peru, Sultana, 
Thompson's Seedless, White Sweetwater, Zante, Zinfandel. 
American Varieties. Price, 25 cents each. Catawba, Concord, Delaware, Isabella, Moore's Eariy, Pock- 
lington, The Pierce, Worden, Wyoming Red. 
SMALL FRUITS 
Currants 
Price, I year, lo cents each, 75 cents per 10. 
Black Grape, Cherry, Fay's Prolific, Gondoin 
Red, White Dutch, White Grape. 
Gooseberries 
Berkeley, i year, 15 cents each ; f i.oo 
Champion, i " 15 " " Ji.oo 
Downing, i " 20 '• " #1.50 
Houghton, I '• 20 " " |i-5o 
Blackberries 
per 10. 
" 10. 
" 10. 
10. 
Raspberries 
Red Varieties. Price, 10 cents each ; 50 cents per 
10. Cuthbert, Hansell, Herstine, Marlboro, 
Thompson's Early. 
Yellow Varieties. Price, 15 cents each ; |i.oo 
per 10. Carolina, Golden Queen, Yellow 
Antwerp. 
Black Cap Varieties. Price, 15 cents each ; |i.oo 
per 10. Gregg, Mammoth Cluster, Ohio. 
The Logan Berry 
(Blackberry Raspberry). 
Price, 30 cents each ; 35 cents each if by mail. 
Japan Wineberry 
Price, 20 cents each; if by mail, 25 cents each. 
Strawberries 
Price, 10 cents each ; 50 cents per 10. Crandall's 
Early, Early Harvest, Evergreen, Kittatiny, 
Lawton, Wilson Junior. 
Dewberry (Lucretia) 
15 cents each, |i.oo per 10. 
Parties desiring larger lots than quoted above, will please state quantity required, 
will then make special prices. 
While we aim to have all our fruit trees true to name, and hold ourselves ready, on 
proper proof, to replace, free of charge, all stock that may prove untrue to label, or to refund 
amount originally paid by the customer, it is mutually understood and agreed between the 
purchaser and ourselves that our guarantee of genuineness shall not make us liable for any 
sum greater than that originally paid us for such stock as may prove untrue. 
Price, 50 cents per 10 ; #2.00 per 100. Captain Jack, 
Longworth's Prolific, Parker Earle, .Saunders, 
Sharpless, Wm. Parry, Wilson's Albany. 
We 
DISTANCES FOR PLANTING 
Standard Apples 20 to 25 ft. apart each way 
Standard Pears 20 to 25 " 
Strong-growing Cherries .201025" '" " " 
Duke and Morello Cherries 18 to 20 " " " " 
Standard Plumsand Prunes 18 to 20 " " 
Peaches and Nectarines . 18 to 20 ' " 
Apricots 25 to 30 ft. apart each way 
Grapes 7 to 10 " " " " 
Currants and Gooseberries 4 by 6. 
Raspberries and Blackberries . . . 3 to 4 by 5 to 7. 
Strawberries for field culture . . i to i ^ by 4 to 5. 
Strawberries for garden culture . . . i to 2 ft. apart. 
NUMBER OF TREES OR PLANTS ON AN ACRE AT GIVEN DISTANCES APART 
DISTANCE Af'ART 
BACH WAV. 
f NUMBEK OF PLANTS ^ 
Square Knuikiteral 
DISTANCK AFAt 
Method. 
Triangle Method. 
EACH WAV. 
43.560 
50,300 
14 feet 
10,890 
12.575 
IS " . 
4,840 
5.889 
16 " 
2,722 
3.130 
18 •' 
1,742 
2,011 
20 " 
1,210 
1,397 
22 " 
807 
928 
24 " 
680 
785 
25 " 
537 
620 
30 " . 
435 
502 
3.'; " 
302 
348 
40 " . 
3 
4 " 
5 " 
6 " 
7 " 
8 " 
9 " 
10 " 
12 " 
RULE— Square Method. —Multiply the distance in feet between the rows by the distance the plants 
are apart in the rows, and the product will be the number of square feet for each plant or hill, which, 
divided into the number of feet in an acre (43,560), will give the number of plants or trees to the acre. 
RULE— Equilateral Triangle /lethod Divide the number required to the acre "square method " 
by the decimal .866. The result will be the number of plants required to the acre by this method. 
-NUMItER OF FLANTS ^ 
Square 
Equilateral 
Method, 
Triangle Method. 
222 
256 
193 
22^ 
170 
i9i 
154 
109 
'25 
90 
104 
75 
86 
69 
79 
48 
55 
35 
40 
27 
31 
