FLAMING GIANT 
Large, Sweet, Brilliant Red Raspberry 
for the Home Garden 
SPECIAL—AT NEW LOW PRICES 
Ironclad 
in 
Hardiness 
Tremendously 
Heavy 
Yielder 
FLAMING GIANT(Ohta) 
Fruit large size, beautiful bright red—high qual¬ 
ity. Excellent for preserves, canning and other cul¬ 
inary purposes. Special low prices: 50c per 10; 
$1.00 per 25 postpaid; $2.50 per 100; $15.00 per 
1000 by express. 
LLOYD GEORGE 
We have a very few 
plants of this large 
high quality English raspberry. Price, 25c each; 
$1.50 per 12; $2.50 per 25; $6.50 per 100 postpaid. 
SATISFIED CUSTOMERS—Best Advertisement 
I wish to say that the plants I received 
from you last spring lived (every one), which 
I think is very fine indeed. I have mentioned 
the fact to my friends. 
Sept. 6, 1935. Geo. E. Franke, Indiana. 
The St. Regis and New Logan berries that 
I ordered from you a year ago last spring are 
astonishingly productive. 
Nov. 15, 1935. Mrs. J. F. Bullitt, Virginia 
HEAVY-BEARING AGE 
RASPBERRY PLANTS 
Gain a year 
and produce fruit the first sea- 
son. This is choice transplanted stock 
and we 
can furnish at 
the following prices: 
By Express 
Postpaid 
Not Prepaid 
12 
25 
100 
500 
Black Beauty . 
. $1.60 
$2.50 
$3.75 
$15.00 
Chief . 
. 1.50 
2.25 
3 50 
14.00 
Columbian . . . 
. 1.65 
2.75 
5.00 
23.50 
Cumberland 
. 1.50 
2.25 
3.50 
14.00 
Flaming Giant. 
. 1.50 
2.25 
3.50 
14.00 
Golden Queen . 
. 2.50 
3.75 
10.00 
Latham . 
. 1.50 
2.25 
3.50 
14.00 
Potomac . 
. 1.75 
3.00 
5.00 
25.00 
Newburgh .... 
. 1.65 
2.65 
4.50 
22.50 
Quillen . 
. 1.60 
2.50 
4.00 
16.50 
St. Regis. 
. 1.50 
2.25 
3.50 
14.00 
Famous Whitesbog 
Delicious in Flavor—Profitable 1 —Very Ornamental 
Large clusters of sapphire blueberries; plump, tender, prac¬ 
tically seedless, the size of grapes and far superior to the wild 
Blueberries in flavor. 
They are easy to grow. They beg to be eaten—fresh with 
cream or in any of the multitude of ways in which wild Blue¬ 
berries are served. 
DELIGHTFULLY ORNAMENTAL No shrub is of greater beauty 
the year round than the Blueberry. During the summer the 
foliage is a deep, rich satiny green, and against this background 
hang clusters of berries royal in their magnificence. The leaves 
are crimson and a bronze in autumn and twigs red in winter. 
In the spring are the pink buds and the white flower bells. 
Price, strong plants, finest varieties developed by U. S. Dep’t 
of Agriculture, $1.60 each; $15.00 per 10, postpaid. 
Two plants should be set to insure cross pollination. We 
will supply two varieties when more than one plant is ordered. 
Whitesbog Blueberries prefer an acid soil containing an 
abundance of peat or other partially rotted vegetable matter. 
They also need a moderate supply of moisture and good 
drainage. If your soil is not already acid this condition may 
be created easily by mixing with the surface soil and a lib¬ 
eral quantity of peaty material such as acid peat, partially 
rotted leaves, pine needles, sawdust or chip dirt from an old 
wood pile. A surface mulch of leaves or straw each year is 
also beneficial to hold an even soil moisture. 
Blueberries 
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