GRAPES. 
o- 
EARLY VICTOR-S-^ason of the Janesville Init 
much better fruit. Black. Bunch and berry 
medium, cluster compact. 'Fender, sweet, rich 
and very good. 
MOORE’S EARLY — 'I’wo weeks earlier than the 
Concord. Shctdd be in every collection. 
BRIGHTON-Da rk red. One of the most de- 
sirable of the new grapes. Ripens with the 
Worden. 
EMPIRE STATE-A very strong grower. Best 
of the white gra]>es. Earlier than Concord. 
Keeps well. 
LADY A very choice white grape. Healthy 
but not as vigorous as the Em|)ire State- Fruit 
nice size and very fine quality. 
WORDEN — Black. Bunch and berry large. 
Quality much better than Concord and a week 
earlier. For home use it is one of the very best 
of the blacks. 
V 
CURRANTS. 
Currants require the best of cultivation and 
high feed. The fence corner theory of old 
times, is — we are glad to say — discarded. 'Fhe 
worms have weeded out the shiftless and care- 
less growers, and the enterprising ones soon 
found it paid to feed and cultivate this whole- 
some fruit. 
Plant your currants in rows six feet apart, and 
three feet in the row, keep clean from weeds, 
and top dress occasionally with rotten manure, 
