4 
J. T. LOVETT, LITTLE SILVER, N. J. 
FALL-BEARING STRAW¬ 
BERRIES 
Price, except as noted, pot-grown plants, 
dozen, $1.25; 100, $7.50. 
Advance.—Much like Superb, but with larger 
truit. 
CHAMPION EVERBEARING.—Apparent¬ 
ly a seedling of Superb, and, like it in many 
respects, though it is much more productive 
and the fruit is larger. Dozen, $1.50; 100, $9.00. 
Forward.—Produces good fall crops of high 
quality berries. 
Francis.—In habit of growth and other char¬ 
acteristics, very similar to Progressive, but is 
even more fruitful. 
Ideal.—This is, with us, one of the very best 
of the fall-bearing sorts. 
LUCKY BOY.—Claimed to be “the biggest, 
sweetest, and most productive everbearing 
strawberry as yet produced.” We feel it is 
destined to be the “everbearing variety of the 
future.” Dozen, $1.50; 100; $9.00. 
NEVER FAIL.—One of the most promis¬ 
ing varieties that we have as yet tested. 
Claimed by the originator to be three times as 
productive of fruit as Superb. Dozen, $1.50; 
100, $9.00. 
Progressive.—Bears two large crops a year; 
the first in June, with the second early varieties, 
and a second crop throughout the fall. One 
of the most prolific of the fall-bearing sorts. 
Superb.—The best known and most largely 
planted of the fall-bearing varieties. Produces 
very attractive flame-colored berries both sum¬ 
mer and autumn. 
We will send a half dozen each of the 
above nine varieties (all pot-grown) for 
$5.50, or a dozen of each for $10.00. 
RASPBERRIES 
Plants will be sent by mail if desired, provided cash is sent for postage, as per table. 
Autumn is the best season of the year for planting Raspberries. 
In field culture, plant in rows six feet apart and the plants three feet distant in the rows; 
requiring 2,420 plants per acre. The cap varieties, however, should be planted in rows seven 
feet apart and the plants three and one-half feet distant in the rows. In the garden, plant all 
varieties four feet apart each way. 
ST. REGIS EVERBEARING OR RANERE 
New Jersey’s Mortgage Lifter 
St. Regis is unquestionably, all things considered, by far the most valuable variety of 
Raspberry that has appeared within the last quarter of a century. Introduced by us in 1910, it 
lias, by sheer merit, forged ahead of all others until it now stands at the top of the list of red 
varieties. The bright red berries, though not as large as some, are of fine quality and are 
produced in tremendous quantities not only in early summer (it ripens the earliest of all), 
but also throughout the fall and right up until freezing weather. In addition to being extremely 
hardy and drought-resistant, it thrives on hot sandy soil where most other sorts could not 
possibly succeed. Unlike most other Raspberries, it yields a moderate crop of berries the 
first season if planted in autumn or early spring. 
The St. Regis sends up suckers or young plants excessively, and unless these are kept down 
(to a single row of plants or three to four plants to the hill) with hoe or otherwise, treating the 
surplus ones as weeds, the crop of fruit will be small, both in quantity and size of the berries. 
Selected sucker plants, dozen, $1.00: 100, $5.50; 1,000, $25.00. Transplanted plants, dozen, 
$1.50; 100, $6.00; 1,000, $50.00. Heavy fruiting plants, dozen, $3.00; 100, $15.00. 
WHITE QUEEN (Everbearing) 
We have in White Queen a beautiful white-fruited everbearing variety which in some 
respects is actually an improvement unon St. Regis; its fruit is also, if anything, larger and its 
quality simply superb. The fruit of White Queen, served with the fruit of St. Regis or other 
red-fruited variety, is surely a delight to the eye and a real treat to the inner man. To this 
remarkable new Everbearing variety, after a thorough test, we give our unqualified endorse¬ 
ment. Selected sucker plants, dozen, $3.50; .100, $25.00. 
