STEVENSVILLE, MICHIGAN. 
9 
APRICOTS 
HARRIS. — Fruit uniformly large. About the size of the Orleans plum. 
Oval in shape, color, bright yellow with red blush. Quality the best . Very 
iuicv and rich. Very productive. Ripens about July 20th. 
4 to* 5 ft.. 30 cts. each, 3 to 4 ft., 25 cts. each. 
QUINCES 
ORANGE. — Large, bright yellow, of excellent flavor. 
3 to 4 ft., SOcts. each. $3.00 per dozen. 
2 to 3 ft., 25cts. each $2.50 per dozen. 
MULBERRY 
RUSSIAN. — Very hardv. vigorous grower, fruit a small size, varies in color 
from white to black. Trees 3 to 4 ft., 25 cts. each. 
GRAPES 
There is ’scarcely a yard so small either in the country or city that room 
for from one to a dozen of grape vines cannot be found. They do admirably, 
trained up the side of any building, or along the garden fences, occupying 
but little room, and furnishing an abundance of the healthiest of fruit. Make 
the soil mellow, and plant the vines somewhat deeper than they stood in the 
nursery. Plant about eight feet apart by the fence or building. For vineyards 
make rows 8 ft., apart, 8 to 10 ft., in rows. 
CONCORD. — The well known standard variety. Succeeds wherever grapes 
will grow. • 
CAMPBELLS EARLY. — Medium grower. Large healthy foliage. Produc- 
tive. Its keeping and shipping qualities are equalled bj; no other early grape. 
Ripens with Moores Early. Bunch and berry large, glossy, black with blue 
bloom; sweet and juicy. Seeds few and small. Part readily from the pulp. 
Stands at the head of early grapes. 
CHAMPION. — (Talman.) Very early. Bunch and berry good size, thick skin, 
productive. Poor quality. Profitable owing to their earliness. 
DELAWARE. — Bunches small, compact, shouldered. Berries rather small 
round, skin thin, light red. Sweet, spicy, and delicious. Vine moderately vig- 
orous, hardy and productive. Ripens early. 
DIAMOND. — The leading early white grape, ripening before Moores Early, 
white with rich yellow tinge, juicy, few seeds. Almost free from pulp, excel- 
lent quality, above medium size, adheres firmly to stem. \ me like Concord in 
growth, hardiness and foliage. Fine variety for both market and home garden. 
MOORES EARLY. — A black grape, with a heavy blue bloom, bunch large, 
berrv round. Quality better than the Concord, vine exceedingly hardy, and 
has been exposed to temperature of twenty degrees below zero without injury. 
It has been entirely exempt from mildew or disease. Its earliness, good quality, 
and fine appearance make it a profitable market variety. 
NIAGARA— A white variety; bunch and berry very large, greenish white, 
changing to pale yellow when fully ripe. Skin thin, but tough. Quality very 
much like Concord. 
WORDEN. — An improved Concord, being larger in both bunch and berry, 
handsomer, nearly two weeks earlier, and of better quality, fine, vigorous, 
hardy, and productive. 
WYOMING RED. — Vine very hardy, healthy and robust, with thick, leathery 
foliage; color of berry similar to Delaware, but brighter; being one of the 
most beautiful of the amber or red grapes, and in size nearly double that of 
Delaware. Flesh tender, juicy, sweet, with a strong native aroma. Ripens be- 
fore Delaware, the best early red market variety. 
