NEW FLORAL GUIDE, AUTUMN, 1918 
These FruitsWill Help You to Help'Hoo ver” 
LITTLE COST, LITTLE SPACE, LITTLE LABOR, AND BRING BIG RETURNS 
When you plant a home-garden nowadays 
you have to consider what will give the best 
returns for the space occupied. These fruits 
all “earn their keep” and more, for from a 
single grape-vine, well matured, it is easy to 
get at least a bushel of luscious fruit for eating 
or preserving for winter. Blackberries and 
raspberries also produce fruit bountifully. 
So plant wherever space can be found. 
Delicious Grapes 
Niagara. This most popular white < -rape is grown in 
enormous quantities for the market, where it finds a 
ready sale. The berries are large, amber-white, with 
white bloom, thin-skinned, tender pulp, sweet, and 
luscious. The clusters arc large and compact and 
ripen in midseason. 30 cts. each; <> for $1.50 □. 
McPike. A very hardy Grape, purplish black in color. 
Succeeds everywhere. The berries are large and 
deliciously flavored. 50 cts. each; <> for $2.50 □. 
Berckmans. A lovely sweet (.tape with berries of 
medium size which form in large solid clusters. A 
variety you should grow as the fruit is not often seen 
on the market. 30 cts. each; 6 for Si. 50 □. 
Grapes are ornamental as well as fruitful. Plant 
them wherever you have a place where the vines can be 
tied. You can plant them against buildings, over arches, 
on trellises, etc. These vines grow fast, they have large 
leaves, and make welcome shade in summer. 
Lucretia Dewberry 
One of the low-growing, trailing blackberries. 
Perfectly hardy, healthy, and very productive. It 
ripens a little before blackberries md the fruit is 
large, rich, and luscious. 6 for 65 cl s., 12 for $1, ppd. 
The Japanese Wineberry 
This remarkable berry belongs to the raspberry 
family and makes a strong, hardy bush 3 to 4 feet 
high; the fruit is borne in large clusters, and covered 
with a curious burr of fine reddish moss, like moss 
rose buds, which open when ripe, showing the berries, 
which are bright, rich scarlet; excellent for cooking; 
makes fine jams, jellies, . 
and preserves. Fruits m St. Regis , 
r- , 1 JKL is (he most popular 
first season; a heavy Raspberry 
bearer. 3 for 50 cts., Qh now grown 
7 for $1, postpaid. 
St. Regis—The new Everbearing Raspberry 
DiacKDerries 
6 for 65 cts., 12 for $1, postpaid; 100 for $5 □ 
Early Harvest. A compact, dwarf grower; it ripens 
very early; excellent quality and very productive. 
Snyder. The fruit is of medium size, sweet and 
juicy, with no hard acid core. 
Eldorado. A midseason Blackberry, producing large, 
rich-flavored fruits. 
Raspberries 
Cuthbert or Queen Raspberry. Strong and hardy 
with large, handsome, crimson berries. Very sweet. 
Columbian. The largest, finest flavored, and most 
productive black Raspberry yet produced. 
Above two, 6 for 65 cts., 12 for $1, ppd.; 100 for $5 □ 
St. Regis Everbearing. A unique variety of great 
value. It ripens very early — in advance of all 
others, and gives an immense summer crop. It 
also gives an autumn crop, con¬ 
tinuing to produce large, perfect 
berries of full flavor until the 
ground freezes. The canes are 
of ironclad hardihood and of 
vigorous growth. Berries of 
good size, rich bright crimson in 
color, and of excellent quality, 
nlike any other variety of the 
Raspberries, it yields a 
moderate crop of berries the 
first season. Price 12 for $1.25, 
postpaid; 100 for $7.50 □. 
□ This indicates delivery not prepaid. See page 3. 
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