QUINCES 
Quince trees are both useful and ornamen¬ 
tal. When covered with their beautiful blos¬ 
soms in the Spring they are most ornamental, 
and the delicious jellies made from their fruit 
are very valuable. 
No. 1 Grade, 2 yr. trees 
$1.00 each, $9.00 per 10 
Champion. A standard yellow variety 
slightly later than Orange. 
Orange. Large, round, golden yellow. 
October. 
CULTIVATED BLUEBERRIES 
A grand combination of luscious 
fruit on the most beautiful ornamental 
shrub. 
Cultivated Blueberries are the result 
of 25 years of experimenting. No 
spraying or difficult care necessary. 
Gigantic berries of exquisite flavor. 
Plants hardy at 30 degrees below zero. 
Bearing Age Plants. 18 in. high. 
3 for $5.00 
Three different varieties are sup¬ 
plied to afford cross pollination. 
BLACKBERRIES 
Alfred. The Mammoth New Blackberry. 
For the home garden, Alfred is the ideal 
Blackberry. Tremendously large berries 
from to 1 % in. long, practically free 
from seeds and extremely juicy. Heavy 
plants. 20c. each, $1.75 per doz. 
Blower. The Blower Blackberry has been an 
outstanding favorite for many years. It 
produces very large jet black fruit of deli¬ 
cious flavor. A most productive variety. 
Strong, transplanted plants. 15c. each, 
$1.50 per doz. 
BOYSENBERRY 
From a triple cross involving Loganberries 
Blackberries, and Raspberries, Boysenberries 
were bred by Rudolph Boysen, superinten¬ 
dent of Parks at Anaheim, Calif. They are 
now planted in almost every state in the 
union. We offer it because of the tremendous 
large size of the berries, because of its very 
prolific fruiting and because Boysenberries 
are the highest quality of all bramble fruits. 
2 yr. Transplants, 25c. each, $2.50 per 12. 
DEWBERRIES 
Lucretzia. The berries are far larger and in¬ 
comparably better than any Blackberry 
and of unequaled excellence; soft, sweet 
and luscious throughout; of brightest glossy 
black color. 2 yr. transplants. 10c. each, 
$1.00 per doz. 
HARDY GRAPES 
First-class, 2-yr. vines, 
30c. each, $2.00 per 10 
Transplanted, 2-yr. vines, 
50c. each, $4.00 per 10 
Caco. Wine red. Sweet, delicious flavor. 
Large berries in compact bunches. Slightly 
earlier than Concord, our finest Grape. 
50c. each, $4.00 per 10. 
Concord. Best known and most successful 
Grape in this section. Blue black. 
Delaware. Sweet and vinous. Red. 
Fredonia (New). Promises to be the earliest 
good black Grape. Vigorous, hardy and 
productive. One of the best American red 
juice varieties. 50c. each, 10 for $4.00. 
Niagara. Pale green, sweet, ripens with 
Concord. 
Portland. A newer white Grape and one of 
the best for this section. Very early with a 
delicious flavor. 
20 
PLUMS 
If puichasers of fruit trees knew how deli¬ 
cious Plums are when picked ripe from the 
tree, nurserymen would need largely to in¬ 
crease their stock of these fruits. Occasion¬ 
ally visitors at the nursery say to us they do 
not wish to buy Plum trees, as the fruit is so 
sour. The reason for this is that their experi¬ 
ence has been with fruit purchased at the 
store and picked long before it was ripe. No 
fruit herein listed is sweeter than Plums, well 
ripened on the tree. 
No. 1 Grade, 2 yr. trees, $1.00 each 
5 yr., ready to bear, XX Transplanted, 
$2.50 
SELECTED FIRST-CLASS 
Abundance. Large, amber, sweet. Early. 
Burbank. Cherry red. Good producer- 
Early. 
German Prune. Dark purple. A great 
favorite. Late. 
Imperial Gage. Yellowish green, flesh rich, 
and sweet. Very productive. Mid-August. 
Shropshire Damson. Dark purple. Excel¬ 
lent for preserving. 
CURRANTS 
New Red Lake. Finest of all Red Currants. 
The berry is unusually large in size and 
superior in quality. The clusters are long 
and filled out to the top. Heavy yields. 
40c. each, $3.50 per 10. 
Perfection. A large, beautiful, bright red 
Currant. Very productive and of superior 
qualitv. Clusters are compact and easy to 
pick. $2.50 per 10. $20.00 per 100. 
RASPBERRIES 
Black Beauty. Black. An outstanding new 
black Raspberry. Heavy yielding, large 
size and excellent quality. Growth is up¬ 
right and so thrifty that planting distance 
should be increased to about 4 to 7 ft. 
Hardier and more productive than Cum¬ 
berland. Ripens midseason and is firm.Very 
resistant to mosaic and other virus diseases. 
Heavy, 2 yr. transplants, 15c. each, $1.50 
per doz., $9.00 per 100. 
Indian Summer. Red everbearing. A grand 
new variety produced at Geneva Experi¬ 
ment Station. Produces a crop in early 
Spring and then again in the late Summer 
with the bulk of this Fall crop in October, 
continuing until killed by freezing weather. 
Berries are large and flavor mild, excellent 
quality. Vigorous. Hardy at Geneva. 2 
yr. transplants, 20c. each, $1.75 per doz. 
Marcy. Red. Considered by many as the 
finest red Raspberry yet introduced. The 
fruit is very large, firm and high quality 
and the canes strong, thrifty and hardy. 
Introduced by N. Y. State Agricultural 
Experimental Station. 2 yr. transplants, 
30c. each, $2.50 per 12. 
Newburgh. The world’s finest Red Rasp¬ 
berry. Newburgh leads the field of Red 
Raspberry varieties in its desirable fruiting 
characteristics and productivity, but it has 
also proved itself to be practically immune 
to mosaic, the most dreaded Raspberry dis¬ 
ease. The large, red berry holds its size 
for a long season, has a fine, mild flavor, 
and the berries do not crumble. Early 
ripening and extremely hardy. 20c. each, 
$1.75 per doz. 
New Logan Black Cap. An exceptional new 
early variety preferred by commercial 
growers. Ripens one week earlier than 
Cumberland and with heavier yields. The 
glossy black berries are large and right up 
to the last have no tendency to seediness. 
1 yr. tips. 15c. each, $1.50 per doz. 
(l&Ledale flusU&UeA 
Grapes 
