E. W. REID’S CATALOGUE OF SMALL FRUITS, ETC. 
i6n 
Special Collections of Small Fruits for $1.00 
By Mail Postpaid. 
Strawberries. 
No. 1. — 3 Mrs. Cleveland, 12 Cloud Seed- 
ling, 12 Bubach No. 5, 12 Jessie. 
No. 2. — 12 Warfield No. 2, 12 Pine Apple, 
13 Gandy Prize. 
No. 3. — 12 Monmouth, li Warfield. 0 Bu- 
bach, 3 Piper Pacific, 12 Cloud. 
No. 4.— '2 Belmont, 12 Bomba, 12 Lida 
12 Gold, (i Warfield. 
No. 5. — (i Eureka, 12 Best, 12 Summit, 12 
Logan. 
No. 6.— 6 Crawford, 12 Jessie, 12 Crimson 
Cluster, 12 Ontario, 6 Gold. 
No. 7. — 12 Warfield, 12 Lida, 12 Bubach 
No. 5, 12 Cloud. 
No. 8. — 12 Logan, 6 Miami, 1 Piper Pro- 
lific, 12 Poarl, 1 Eureka. 
No. 9.-3 Crawford, 3 Mrs. Cleveland, 12 
Monmouth, 12 Haverlaud. 
No. 10.— 0 Haverlaud,*! Warfield, 12 Pine 
Apple, 12 Gandy’s Prize, 12 Bel- 
mont. 
No. 11.— 12 Logan, 6 Burt, 3 Eureka, 12 
Gandy’s Prize, 6 Cloud. 
No. 12.— 3 Crawford, 3 Mrs. Cleveland, 3 
■pi iipt' c 1 f'i fi 
No. 13.— 12 Summit, 12 Belmont, 12 Mon- 
mouth, 12 Cloud, 12 Burt, 12 
Parry. 
No. 14. — 12 Haverland, 12 Bomba, 0 Gold, 
(i Logan, 6 Cloud. 
No. 15. — 8 Mrs. Cleveland, 3 Eureka, 12 
Pine Apple, (i Monmouth. 
No. 16. — 0 Miami, (i Warfield, 0 Ontario, (1 
Summit, 0 Cloud. 
No. 17. — 2 Mrs. Cleveland, 1 Piper’s Pa- 
cific, 2 Crawford, 2 Eureka, 2 
Miami. 
Raspberries, blackberries, (iJJtc. 
No. 1 . — fi Johnson’s Sweet, 6 Palmer. 
No. 2.— li Golden Queen, 0 Erie, (i Ada. 
No. 3.— fi Hilborn, (1 Pioneer, 6 Shaffer’s. 
No. 4.-2 Thompson’s Early Prolific, 2 
Palmer, (i Golden Queen, 4 
Johnson’s Sweet. 
No. 5. — 3 Early King, 3 Erie, 0 Palmer. 
No. 6. — 2 Earhart, <i Ada, (i Johnson’s 
Sweet. 
No. 7 . — G Carman, (i Golden Queen, 6 
Johnson’s Sweet. 
No. 8. — 0 Pioneer, li Ada, 2 Palmer. 
No. 9. — (i Minnewaski, I! Lueretia, fi Ada. 
No. 10 . — 0 Erie, (i Pioneer, 6 Johnson’s 
' Sweet. 
No. 11. — 2 Earhart, 2 Thompson’s Early 
Prolific, I! Golden Queen. 
No. 12. — I! Johnson’s Sweet, 4 Thompson’s 
Early Prolific. 
No. 13.— fi Wilson Jr., G Minnewaski, 0 
Lueretia. 
No. 14.— 12 Lueretia, 12 Erie. 
No. 15. — 12 Wilson Jr., Wilson’s Early. 
No. 16. — G Minnewaski, fi Palmer. 
No. 17.— fi Ada, fi Early King. 
No. 18. — 12 Erie, (1 Pioneer. 
No. 19.— 1 Moyer Grape, 2 Palmer. 
No. 20 — 1 Eaton, 6 Pioneer. 
No. 21. — fi Fay’s Currants, 1 Niagara 
Grape. 1 Concord. 
No. 22. 1 Wonderful Peach, 1 Niagara, 1 
Empire State, 1 Pocklington. 
not stock named, as we have given a 
l2f"NoTK. — Order by number of collection and 
cut rate to introduce our stock to the public. 
ASPARAGUS ROOTS. 
Conover's Colossal. Very large, and makes a rapid growth. Can be cut quite fre- 
quently, and brings the highest prices. 1 year, 25 ets. per dozen, 50 ets, per 100, SI 
per 1,000: 2 year, 50 ets. per dozen, T5 cts. per 100, £5 per 1,000. 
A Fixe Fruit Farm.— E. W. Reid, of the Sunny Hill Fruit Farm, located near- 
Bridgeport, is engaged upon his Annual Spring Catalogue which, from indications, will 
be the finest ho has yet presented to his customers and the general public. The Sunny 
Hill Fruit Farm has a wide reputation for producing the very finest fruits in large varie- 
ty, while its proprietor is becoming known as an authority upon horticulture, and his 
contributions to such papers as The American Garden, Ohio Farmer, National Stoehman & 
Farmer, Form Life, and the chautauejua Farm & Vineyard have been widely read and exten- 
sively copied by others. Mr. Reid has also an enviable reputation as a plant grower and 
raiser of small fruit. Readers of the Register will remember the fine display of fruit made 
at the State Fair and in the Industrial street display of ’85 and ’8(1, by Mr. Reid, in which 
he took most all the premiums. — Clipped from the Daily Register, Wheeling, W. Va. 
