Fruit Trees and Small Fruits 
115 
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Grapes 
Raspberries 
Blackberries 
Strawberries 
Peaches 
These are 5 to 6-foot trees Each 10 
Belle of Georgia. White flesh. Early Sept.$0 75 $6 50 
Carman. White flesh. 75 6 50 
Champion. White. Early Aug. 75 6 50 
Crawford’s Early. Yellow. Early Sept. 75 6 50 
Crawford’s Late. Yellow. Late Sept. 75 6 50 
Elberta. Yellow. Early Aug. 75 6 50 
Fitzgerald. Yellow. Early Sept. 75 6 50 
Foster. Yellow. Early Sept. 75 6 50 
Greensboro. White. Late July. 75 6 50 
J. H. Hale. Golden yellow. Early Aug. 75 6 50 
Mountain Rose. White. Late Aug. 75 6 50 
Oldmixon Free. White. Mid-Sept. 75 6 50 
Rochester. Yellow. Early Aug. 75 6 50 
Pears 
These are 5 to 7-foot trees 
Varieties marked * supplied also in dwarf trees budded 
on Quince stocks at the same price 
SUMMER— 
*Bartlett. Yellow and red. 
*Clapp’s Favorite. Yellow and crimson. . . 
Wilder. Bright yellow. 
AUTUMN— 
Beurre Bose. Russet. 
*Flemish Beauty. Yellow and russet. 
Louise Bonne de Jersey. Yellow and red 
*Seckel. Brown. 
Sheldon. Russet... 
Vermont Beauty. Brilliant color. 
WINTER— 
*Beurre d’Anjou. Greenish yellow. 
Lawrence. Golden yellow. 
Plums 
These are 5 to 7-foot trees 
EUROPEAN TYPE— 
Lombard. Purple-red. Aug., Sept. 
Reine Claude. Bavay’s Green Gage. Late Sept.. . 
Shropshire Damson. Purple. Oct. 
Yellow Egg. Aug. 
JAPANESE TYPE— 
Abundance. Yellow with red. Aug. 
Burbank. Cherry-red. Aug. 
Red June. Purple-red. Early Sept. 
Satsuma (Blood). Purple and red. Aug. 
Wickson. Maroon-red. 
Quinces 
These are 4 to 5-foot trees 
Apple or Orange. Golden yellow. 
Champion. Very late. 
Meech’s Prolific. Pear-shaped. Early. 
Rea’s Mammoth. Fine variety of Orange Quince. 
Each 10 
$1 
00 
$9 
00 
1 
00 
9 
00 
1 
00 
9 
00 
1 
50 
1 
00 
9 
00 
1 
00 
9 
00 
1 
00 
9 
00 
1 
00 
9 
00 
1 
00 
9 
00 
1 
00 
9 
00 
1 
00 
9 
00 
Each 10 
$1 
25 
$11 
00 
1 
25 
11 
00 
1 
25 
11 
00 
1 
25 
11 
00 
1 
25 
11 
00 
1 
25 
11 
00 
1 
25 
11 
00 
1 
25 
11 
00 
1 
25 
11 
00 
Each 
10 
$1 
25 
$11 
00 
1 
25 
11 
00 
1 
25 
11 
00 
1 
25 
11 
00 
BLACK— 
Concord. 
Moore’s Early 
Worden. 
Hardy Grapes 
Strong 2-year vines 
Each 
$0 50 
50 
50 
10 
$4 50 
4 50 
4 50 
RED AND REDDISH PURPLE— 
Agawam (Roger’s No. 15). 50 4 50 
Caco. 75 6 50 
Brighton. 50 4 50 
Delaware. 50 4 50 
Salem (Roger’s No. 53). 50 4 50 
WHITE— 
Moore’s Diamond. 50 4 50 
Niagara. 50 4 50 
Notice: In cooperation with the Federal and State Depart¬ 
ments of Agriculture, we neither grow nor sell currants and 
gooseberries, as they are host plants to the white pine blister. 
Blackberries i 0 100 
Blowers. July.$1 00 $8 00 
Early Harvest. The earliest. 1 00 8 00 
Eldorado. Very hardy. 1 00 8 00 
Raspberries 10 100 
Columbian. Purple.$1 00 $8 00 
Cumberland. Black. Early. 1 00 8 00 
Erskine Park. Red. Everbearing. 1 00 8 00 
King. Bright red. Early. 1 00 8 00 
Latham. Deep red. 1 00 8 00 
Strawberries 
Layer plants for Spring planting. 100 1000 
Arabine. Extra early. $3 00 $25 00 
Commonwealth. Late. Crimson. 3 00 25 00 
Early Ozark. Extra early. Dark red. 3 00 25 00 
Glen Mary. Late. 3 00 25 00 
Howard XVII. Midseason. Crimson. 3 00 25 00 
Marshall. Midseason. Crimson. 3 00 25 00 
Senator Dunlap. Early Midseason. Dark red .... 3 00 25 00 
William Belt. Late. Deep red. 3 00 25 00 
Pot-grown plants in August and September. Prices on application 
Fall or Everbearing Strawberries 
There have been marked improvements of late, in both size 
and flavor of this class of Strawberry. A bed of these plants will 
be greatly appreciated when one may gather fresh berries in the 
late Summer and Autumn. 
Layer plants for Spring planting. 10 100 
Mastodon.$0 75 $4 00 
Progressive. 75 4 00 
Superb. 75 4 00 
Pot-grown plants in August and September. Prices on application 
