Beta 
PRICES 
GRAPES: 
5 
10 
25 
Concord . . 
Standard Grade . . . 
_#0.60 
#0.90 
#1.95 
Heavy Grade . 
.85 
1.20 
2.45 
Beta . 
Standard Grade . . . 
.75 
1.35 
3.15 
Heavy Grade . . . . 
.95 
1.75 
3.85 
Fredonia . . 
Standard Grade . . . 
_ 1.10 
1.95 
3.95 
Heavy Grade . . . . 
... 1.35 
2.35 
4.95 
Packing and 
Postage . 
... .13 
.17 
.35 
1 Fredonia 
Splendid Recipe for Grape Juice! 
Put 3 cups of Grapes in a 2'quart 
jar. Add 2 cups sugar, then fill jar 
with boiling water, and seal at once. 
This makes a splendid refreshing 
drink. 
Grapes That 
Grow and Bear 
Home grown sun ripened 
Grapes are possible for 
you if you plant the var - 
ieties listed below. Easy 
to grow, delightful to eat, 
refreshing to drink. 
FREDONIA, the new, outstanding early black Grape (See 
color cut, back cover). Fredonia is the earliest good black 
Grape. The vine is vigorous and productive and ripens its 
fruit 3 weeks earlier than Concord. The clusters are medium 
in size, cylindrical and very compact; berries large, round, and 
hang well to the bunch; the skin is thick and tough; the flesh 
is juicy, solid, but tender, and the quality is very good. 
Fredonia stands alone as an early heavy fruiting black Grape. 
Plant Fredonia this year and grow your own table grapes. 
We have never seen its equal. As soon as plants are more 
plentiful, Fredonia will be widely planted for market as it has 
three weeks the lead in ripening. Supply limited this season— 
order early. 
y O 
CONCORD. A popular Grape where the season is long 
enough for it to ripen. When fully ripe, the flesh is juicy, 
sweet, pulpy, and tender. Adapted only to the southeastern 
part of Minnesota and similar climate. 
BETA. The most widely grown and probably the most 
profitable Grape grown in the Northwest. A heavy, annual 
bearer, hardy as the wild Grape and produces enormous crops 
of medium size black fruit of extra good quality for juice and 
jelly, and ripens so early that it can be grown far North. An 
essential part of any home garden and wonderfully profitable 
as a commercial Grape. The demand is greater than the supply, 
and increasing every year. Financially Beta is a permanent in' 
vestment that will prove lasting and highly profitable. The Beta 
withstands our severe northern winters without protection. 
They may be grown on fences, over a building, or in a wind' 
mill tower and should bear heavily every year. For real heavy 
production they should be trained on trellises and cultivated. 
Their chief use is for jelly and grape juice. At the extremely 
low prices you can afford to have a good planting of Beta. 
Directions for care and pruning will accompany plants. Beta 
needs no winter protection. Fredonia, Worden and Concord 
should be laid to the ground and covered with earth through 
the winter. 
