DANIEL/ MAieDY 
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At last we can grow cherries in the cold North. Into these splendid new varieties have been bred 
the hardiness and very early bearing characteristics of their sand-cherry parents together with the 
high dessert and canning qualities of their true cherry ancestors. We offer this year an especially 
fine stock of these valuable new varieties at pleasingly low prices. 
OKA—A tremendous yielder of large round 
cherries fully one inch in diameter. Dark 
red outside with a juicy, purple meat in¬ 
side. Wonderfully sweet. The best of all 
the purple fleshed cherries. 
ZUMBRA—The best sweet cherry type for 
Minnesota. Bears early. A tremendous 
yielder. When properly ripened on the 
tree the fruits are delicious to eat out of 
hand and one of the finest canning fruits 
known. 
CONCORD—The most popular table grape 
and the most widely grown of the blue 
dessert grapes. It is (he standard of com¬ 
parison for all other grapes. 25c each; 
$2.50 for 12; $4.50 for 25. 
DELAWARE—The finest red grape, if you 
are looking for a beautiful, reliable grape 
of the very finest quality, Delaware, with 
its unequalled spiciness and sweetness, 
will fill the bill. 35c each; $3.50 for 12. 
NIAGARA—America’s leading green grape. 
Splendid quality; very productive. Ni¬ 
agara holds the same enviable place 
among green grapes that Concord does 
among the blue ones. 35c each; $3.50 for 
12 . 
BETA—The standard hardy grape. Very 
productive; yields of from % to 1 bushel 
per vine are not uncommon in well cared 
for vineyards. Hardy grapes have been 
one of the most profitable fruit crops in 
recent years. Price: 25c each; $2.50 for 
12; $4.50 for 25; $17.00 for 100. 
ALPHA—The improved Beta. A more re¬ 
cent introduction than Beta but preferred 
to it by many of those who have grown 
both. Similar in production and has most 
of the Beta characteristics but is com¬ 
monly considered to be of better flavor 
than Beta. 30c each; $3.00 for 12; $5.50 
for 25; $20.00 for 100. 
Concord 
ZUMBRA 
PRICES 
1 
10 
2nd size . 
.80 
7.00 
1st size . 
. 1.00 
8.50 
Bearing Age ... 
. 1.25 
11.00 
COMPASS—While this fine old variety is not 
the equal of the other three cherries in 
quality it is a most acceptable and popular 
fruit for canning. It is the best pollen- 
izer known for the other cherries and 
should be included in all plantings. 
G O 0/LE>El?l?l£./ C Um NT/ 
CARRIE. The Thornless Gooseberry. Carrie has 
been the most popular gooseberry in Minnesota 
and adjacent states in the past. It is a prolific 
vielder of good sized berries which ripen red. 
Sometimes called the thornless gooseberry be¬ 
cause the pricker^ are lost from the wood after 
the first year. %0<t eack 2-°-Toi 
*1 y. 3o4«acla; , ^3 <i? f > or 12; 85?^ To 
.• \Z) 
25 
COMO. Minnesota’s New Wonder Gooseberry. 
(Minnesota No. 43.) Described by the origina¬ 
tors, the Minnesota State Fruit Breeding Farm, 
as follows: 
‘‘A vigorous, productive plant with exceptionally 
healthy foliage. Fruit roundish or slightly oblong. 
Ripens green, quality fair, holds on the bushes a long 
time in good market condition without scalding, even in 
the hottest weather. The plant is only moderately 
thorny, many thorns dropping from the two year old 
wood.” 
The advent of Como marks the greatest ad¬ 
vancement made in mid-western gooseberry 
culture in many years. <2gcL) 
for 12 ; K to -Po.-'25 n 
C3ch.;Jf3- 5 ’° Tor 12 (6 So tor £% 
RED LAKE (Minnesota No. 24). The finest of 
all currants has just received the final approval 
from the State University and been given the 
name ‘‘Red Lake.” Red Lake has undergone 
thorough testing for several years at the Minne¬ 
sota Experiment Station, and throughout the 
Northwest, wherever tried, it has shown a 
marked superiority over all other varieties. It 
is of splendid quality, exceptionally large with 
long clusters well filled to the lip. Ripens early 
mid-season but holds on for a long period so 
that it can be marketed when prices are highest. 
Professor Alderman states that he believes it 
is the largest fruited and heaviest yielding cur¬ 
rant in Minnesota. Supplies of this wonderful 
currant are limited, so we urge early ordering 
luv. 304 eitok;1£ ;l 5 €.°+’o.- ZST. 
Zy'“- ToMT* ° fioi* ZS’ 
PERFECTION. Probably the finest of the older 
varieties of currants for home use. 
2yi*. ‘35‘4 e.ach..j^3 €P ?o>- laj | S'- Tw 25 
