) 
BIG MONEY-MAKER 
GROW FIGS IN THE NORTH 
Our Dwarf Fig is particu¬ 
larly adapted to pot culture. 
As a pot or tub plant, it 
is extremely valuable either 
indoors or outdoors, and is 
an abundant bearer of the 
most delicious fruit. It will 
winter safely in an ordinary 
cellar, or it can be allowed 
to harden off with a few 
fall frosts and then be 
brought indoors for grow¬ 
ing during the winter. Our 
Dwarf Fig is a variety 
which fruits on the young Dwarf Fig Fruits 
wood, that is, wood of the Reduced in Size 
current year’s growth, which makes it a most desirable 
variety where the tops are likely to be frozen back, 
for if the top is frozen, it can be cut to the ground, and 
when it begins growing it will produce fruit on the 
new wood. It is for pot or tub culture that we par¬ 
ticularly recommend this Fig, but when grown in the 
open ground it will develop a crop of fruit farther 
north than is true of other varieties. Plants bear the 
first year they are set and abundantly each year there¬ 
after. The fruit is very sweet and delicious; of good 
size; with flesh that is firm and meaty, and of very 
fine quality for making preserves, jams, canning, 
drying, or to eat in the fresh state. 
Choice Plants, 90c each—3 for $2.50, Prepaid 
LUCRETIA DEWBERRY 
Lucretia Dewberries are bringing big money. They 
ripen a week or ten days ahead of common blackberries, 
the bulk of the crop harvested before other blackberries 
start to ripen, so sell at very high prices. 
The Dewberry belongs to the blackberry family, and 
the Lucretia is the best of them all. The large berries 
are incomparably better than any blackberry grown; 
of unequaled excellence; sweet and luscious through¬ 
out, and of glossy black color. They are very pro¬ 
ductive, and most profitable of all fruit crops to grow. 
The Lucretia has received the highest endorsement 
and highest praise from the best horticulturists in 
the country. Its trailing habit renders it less liable 
to winter-kill. Propagates from the tips, like black 
raspberries; does not spread or sucker. 
6 for 70c—12 for $1.25—25 for $2.25 
50 for $4.00—100 for $7.00, Prepaid 
GOLDEN QUEEN RASPBERRY 
(Yellow) 
A beautiful, large, golden yellow raspberry. Many 
prefer this variety to any of the red or black sorts, 
owing to its sugary sweetness and unsurpassed flavor. 
Should be in every garden, its beauty and high quality 
placing it at the head for table use. The canes are 
hardy, of strongest growth, and very productive. 
3 for 75c—12 for $2.25—25 for $4.00, Prepaid 
BALSAM PEAR 
Ornamental Vine with 
Edible Fruits 
A very ornamental and curious 
climbing vine, with glossy green 
foliage. Pear-shaped ornamental 
fruits known to Chinese as La- 
Kwa, and used extensively in 
China as a food for human con¬ 
sumption. Usually prepared for 
the table by boiling the fruits 
before they are ripe. Give it a 
trial, both as an ornament and 
as an addition to your list of 
edible fruits. 
Pkt. 10c— 3 Pkts. 25c 
ICEBERG, OR WHITE BLACKBERRY 
It is not merely a curiosity, for in addition to being 
a real novelty, it is a berry of extraordinary quality. 
These shining cream-white berries, when mixed with 
jet-black ones, make a most attractive dish. The 
bushes are good strong growers and very productive. 
For best results this variety should be planted near 
other blackberries. 
3 for 60c—12 for $1.75, Prepaid 
LATHAM RASPBERRY 
A Big Money-Maker 
The Latham is conceded to be the best late red 
raspberry. It has more points of merit and has come 
into general planting more rapidly than any other 
raspberry ever introduced. It is vigorous in growth; 
withstands the winters in Canada without covering; 
and is exceptionally free from mosaic and other diseases. 
The large berries, some running over an inch in diam¬ 
eter, and the deep red color make it most attractive. 
and it is the most productive variety grown. Growers 
are beginning to realize that no other late red rasp¬ 
berry will make them so much money, so surely and 
quickly, as the Latham. One nine-acre field of Latham 
in Minnesota produced an average of $1,000 per acre 
each year for five years, and similar reports are coming 
from all sections of the country. 
6 for 70c—12 for $1.25—25 for $2.25— 
50 for $4.00—100 for $7.00, 
Delivered Prepaid 
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