FRUIT TREES 
FOR SPRING DELIVERY 
APPLES. 4 to 5 ft. tall. 50c each. 
Red Delicious. 
Yellow Transparent 
Red Astrachan 
Red June 
Stamens Winesap 
Hyslop Crab 
PRUNES. 4 to 5 ft. tall. 50c each. 
French 
Silver 
Italian 
CHERRIES. 4 to 5 ft. tall. 1 year old, 75c; 
2 yi\, $1.00. 
Montmorency 
Royal Ann 
Bing 
Lambert 
Black Tartarian 
May Duke 
Late Duke 
PEACHES. 4 to 5 ft. tall. 50c each. 
J. H. Hale 
Elberta 
Early Elberta 
Triumph 
PLUMS. 4 to 5 ft. tall. 50c each. 
Yellow Egg 
Peach 
PEARS. 4 to 5 ft. tall. 50c each. 
Bartlett 
Winter Nellis 
Flemish Beauty 
Bose 
Anjou 
APRICOT. 4 to 5 ft. tall. 50c each. 
Wenatchee Morepark (Large Fruit). 
RED RASPBERRIES 
Cuthbert (“Queen of the Market”). A remark¬ 
ably strong, hardy variety; standing the 
northern winters and southern summers 
equal to any. Very large, conical berries, 
measuring three inches around, so firm they 
can be shipped hundreds of miles by i - ail in 
good condition; flavor is sweet, rich and 
luscious. 10c each; 75c dozen. 
Latham. The best late red Raspberry; vigor¬ 
ous in growth, withstanding winters in Can¬ 
ada without covering. Large, delicious fine- 
flavored berries. 15c each; $1.25 dozen. 
St. Regis (Ranere). Fruit commences to ripen 
with the earliest and continuing on young 
canes until October, many quarts often be¬ 
ing picked after the first snow falls. Berries 
bright crimson, large size, rich, sugary with 
full raspberry flavor: flesh firm and meaty. 
15c each; $1.25 dozen. 
BLACK RASPBERRIES 
Eldorado. The vines are vigorous and hardy, 
enduring the winters of the far northwest 
without injury, their yield, enormous. Ber¬ 
ries large, jet black, borne in large clusters, 
and ripen well together, they are very 
sweet, melting and pleasing to the taste; 
have no hard core, and keep eight or ten 
days after picking. 10c each; $1.00 dozen. 
Lucretia Dewberry. Dwarf and spreading. 
The fruit, which ripens early, is often one 
and one-half inches long by one inch in 
diameter: soft, sweet and luscious through¬ 
out. It is a primitive, thrilling delight to 
turn up a leaf and discover the dead-ripe 
bottom fruits, hot from the sand. 15c each; 
$1.25 dozen. 
Cumberland. Healthy, vigorous, throwing up 
stout, stocky, well-branched canes that pro¬ 
duce immense crops. Fruits very profitable: 
large, firm. Mid-season. 15c each; $1.25 doz. 
See page 33 for 
Special Collection of Fruit Trees 
BLACK GRAPES 
30c each, $2.00 per 10 
Campbell. Bunch and berry large, glossy 
black, with blue bloom, sweet and juicy, 
seeds few and small, part readily from the 
pulp; very early. 
Concord. The standard black, succeeds wher¬ 
ever grapes will grow. 
Moore. Bunch large, berry large round with 
heavy bloom, vine exceedingly hardy; uni¬ 
versally desirable for earliness. 
RED OR AMBER GRAPES 
Agawam. Berries very large, with thick skin; 
pulp soft, sweet and sprightly; very vigor¬ 
ous, ripens early. 20c each; $2.00 per 10. 
WHITE GRAPES 
Niagara. The standard white grape, occupy¬ 
ing the same position among the white vari¬ 
eties as Concord among the black. Bunch 
and berries larger, greenish white changing 
to pale yellow when fully ripe. Skin thin 
but tough; a rampant grower. 20c; $2 per 10. 
STRAWBERRIES 
Progressive. Has long been the leading ever- 
bearing variety. The Progressive is a tall, 
healthy grower, deep-rooted and entirely 
free from fungus diseases. Very productive, 
berries medium size, good quality and de¬ 
licious flavor. 30c doz; 50 for $1.10; $2.00 
per 100. 
Mastodon. A large, heavy yielding ever-bear¬ 
ing variety of delicious flavor; yields a large 
crop in June and continues to bear berries 
of amazing size and quality throughout the 
Summer and Fall. 30c doz; 50 for $1.10; 
$2.00 per 100. 
PETERS & SONS, SPOKANE, WASHINGTON 
31 
