TRUE-TO-NAME STRAWBERRY PLANTS 35 
Ohta. 
Perfection. 
the 
Ohta. Healthy, 
vigorous and 
hardy 
RED RASPBERRIES, continued 
Marlboro . Re 5 *‘ * s t ^ 1 . e standard early variety. As a shipper it is unsurpassed, as 
aiiuuiu. j g noted for its firmness both on the bushes and in shipping. It is pro¬ 
ductive of large, crimson, juicy berries. The bush is an upright, vigorous plant. It is 
greatly appreciated in New Jersey. The Colorado Agricultural Experiment Station says: 
“The best red variety for Colorado.” The Cornell Station and the Maryland Station give 
good reports of it. 
Red. A production of Prof. Hansen, of Dakota. It fruited for us 
this year for the first time and, judging from one season, it 
itself to be the best red Raspberry we have ever grown. The fruit is a 
beautiful scarlet in color, of excellent quality and large size. The plant, 
coming from Minnesota, is very hardy without protection; it was * 
most healthy and vigorous red Raspberry on our place this year; 
no other produced such great quantities of uniformly 
good berries that are firm enough to grow com¬ 
mercially for shipping. Be sure to plant a few in 
your garden; you will be pleased with it both in 
quality of the fruit and vigor of the plant. Stock 
very limited. 
Red. A new Raspberry from 
New York. It is a very tall, 
strong grower and has stood 20 degrees below 
zero without injurying the buds. Berries are of excellent 
quality, highly colored very bright scarlet, mammoth and 
uniform in size, and grows in clusters. Immensely pro¬ 
ductive and continues to bear through a long season. W. 
O. & H. W. Davis, leading commission merchants of New 
York City, say of it: “It is the best Raspberry ever shipped 
to New York. On a low market this variety sold at 8 cents 
per pint, while other varieties were bringing but 4 and 5 
cents.” This is a berry worthy of your consideration and we 
believe you will not be disappointed in it. 
ST RFflS Rec *’ This Raspberry sprung into prominence 
01 . ixCiOIO. almost over night, and is a valuable variety. 
It succeeds upon all soils, whether light, sandy or heavy clay, 
and the canes are absolutely hardy, always and everywhere. Ingrowth it is strong and stalky, with a great 
abundance of healthy, dark green foliage; it is the only variety 
known that gives a crop of fruit the same year planted, and two 
crops a year thereafter. Plants set in early spring will give a small 
crop of fruit the fall following and a full crop the next spring. 
Many growers in New Jersey have averaged over $400.00 per 
acre from this variety. About the middle of August it com¬ 
mences to set fruit on the young canes, and bears continuously 
until frost. The berries are large, beautiful and attractive. If 
you have failed with every other variety of Raspberry, either 
north or south, plant St. Regis and succeed, whether growing 
for home use or market. You cannot afford to ignore this, the 
most wonderful of all red Raspberries. It is one of the best 
for main crop, which is not in the least affected by its fall¬ 
bearing qualities. See the illustration in natural colors on 
the back cover. 
Sunbeam Re ^* A 11 ?*-* 161 " of Prof. Hansen’s originations. 
• The fruit is a bright crimson in color, firm and 
of good quality. The plant is sturdy, upright, 
very vigorous and hardy. It has proved itself to 
be very desirable in the Middle West and it 
will probably become popular throughout the 
country. 
Welch Rec *' T . he A avor is so sweet and rich 
that it is sometimes known as Honey 
Raspberry. The berries are very large, bright 
crimson, melting, luscious and of fine quality. 
The canes are vigorous, hardy and productive. 
An excellent variety for local market and home consumption. 
FINEST HE EVER 
RECEIVED 
Plants arrived yester¬ 
day and were trans¬ 
planted today. They 
are the finest-bodied 
and rooted plants I 
have ever received, and 
I have been raising and 
ordering plants for 
thirty years.— Mrs. G. 
W. Hatch, Woodruff 
County, Arkansas. 
Nov. 7, 1914. 
Sunbeam 
SO DO WE 
We have been getting plants from you for twenty years, always find them 
A No. 1, and have never failed to get good stand, but once, that owing to 
two weeks continued very wet, warm weather just when they arrived. 
Could not get them set out, and just as soon as they were in the ground a 
three days’ fierce wind—and then drought. We are now in our new home, 
moved from Maryland in November, and want to find a kind or two that will 
do well here. We always recommend “Allen’s Plants.”— Elizabeth Hooves, 
Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, March, 1915. 
