WEST HILL NU RSERIES —FREDONIA, NEW YORK 
GRAPES—Continued. 
Gaertner, Red. One of the best of the Rogers’ 
Hybrids. Fruit and clusters large and handsomely 
colored, making a showy grape and selling for 
high prices in fancy fruit stores. Ripens in mid' 
season. Red in color and of excellent flavor. 
Goethe (Rogers No. 1), Light Red. Bunch large, 
berries very large; flesh sweet and juicy; ripens 
about with Catawba. Vine vigorous, rank grower, 
and generally healthy. Good keeper; highly es' 
teemed in the South for table and wine. 
GOLDEN MUSCAT. A new Grape of a golden 
yellow color. In appearance and taste this variety 
is probably nearer a European Grape than any 
other hardy sort. Excellent flavor. Valuable for 
home use and roadside market but has too tender 
a skin for distant shipping. Bunch is large and 
shouldered, tapering. Berries large, oval and of 
a golden color. The plant is vigorous, hardy 
and productive. 
Green, White. Bunch and berry are of medium size. 
Ripens before Moore. Is of fine quality and an 
excellent shipper. A good grower, very healthy, 
hardy and productive. 
Herbert (Rogers No. 44), Black. Bunch and berry 
very large; flesh sweet, tender and of good quality. 
Early, hardy and productive. One of the best of 
Rogers’ Hybrids. 
Hubbard, Black. Bunch and berries large; quality 
sweet. Skin quite thin but firm. Ripens early. 
Ives, Black. Bunch and berry medium; compact. 
Colors early but is not fully ripe until after Con' 
cord. Quality fairly good when fully ripe. Very 
healthy, hardy, vigorous and productive. A gen' 
erally successful market grape. 
Jefferson, Red. A grape of the best quality; bunch 
very large and handsome, often double'shouldered; 
berries medium. Ripens with, or before, Catawba. 
Vine vigorous, healthy and productive. 
The Lucile. 
Has stood since its introduction as the leading red Grape. 
Diamond, White. Bunch and berry large. Quality fine. 
Ripens a little before Concord. A strong grower and 
quite healthy and hardy; very productive. Desirable 
for both home and market. 
Eaton, Black. Similar to Worden, but not as early. 
Berries are even larger, although not so sweet; clus' 
ters not as large and compact. 
Elvira, White. Bunch and berry of medium size and 
very compact. Ripens about with the Catawba. 
A very strong, robust and healthy grower and as pro' 
ductive as anything we Irave yet seen. Highly prized 
as a wine grape in the South. 
FREDONIA, Black. A new, very early Grape, origi¬ 
nated and thoroughly tested by the New York Ex¬ 
periment Station. Ripens with Portland. The 
bunch and berry are large with excellent flavor. 
Ripens fully 10 days before Moore’s Early and is 
an excellent shipper, as it does not crack. This 
Grape fills a long-felt need—a juicy, delicious black 
Grape that ripens early. Vine vigorous and produc¬ 
tive. One of the best new varieties. 
Jessica, White. A grape originated in Canada. Small 
to medium in bunch and berry. Sweet as honey; not 
foxy. Ripens with Moore. Vine a fair, compact 
grower, healthy and productive. One of the hardiest. 
King, Black. New. Much larger than Concord in both 
bunch and berry; more compact, juicier but hardly 
as sweet. Ripens with or a trifle before Concord. 
A good, strong grower, hardy and prolific. Excel' 
lent for show purposes and local market. Too tender 
skinned for distant markets. 
Lindley (Rogers No. 9). A red grape of best quality 
and one of the most desirable of Rogers’ Hybrids. 
Medium to large in bunch and berry; flesh tender, 
sweet and of aromatic flavor. Ripens with Concord. 
Carries and keeps well. Vine vigorous, hardy and 
healthy. This grape seems to be more productive 
when mixed with other varieties and grown on clay 
soil. 
GOOD RESULTS EVERY YEAR 
Ransomville, N. Y., 
Dear Sirs: October 14th, 1932. 
About six years ago I purchased 1000 Concord grape vines 
from your firm and have had good results from same every 
G. A. KLEIN. 
C4l 
