Concord 
Moore’s 
Early 
Niagara 
JT iu|P 
Wyoming Red 
GRAPES 
2-yr. vines, 25c each; 12 for $2.00, except as noted 
Campbell’s Early. Similar to Concord in color and flavor 
but several weeks earlier. 
Concord. The standard black Grape of America. 
Delaware. Moderately vigorous vines with small, compact 
bunches of delicious fruits. 
Lutie. An excellent red Grape of delicious flavor which 
thrives under almost all conditions. A heavy bearer. 
Moore’s Early. The black fruit of the Concord type but 
larger and earlier. 
Niagara. The best white or pale green variety for home 
use and market. 
Scuppernong. A purely southern variety. Vines very vigor¬ 
ous and need plenty of space. 2-yr., 75c each. 
Wyoming Red. Healthy, vigorous vines with thick-skinned 
fruits of sprightly, aromatic flavor. 
VESTAL FIGS, Brown Turkey 
See page 42 
BOYSENBERRY 
A new hybrid vine berry de¬ 
veloped from the blackberry, 
loganberry, and raspberry. The 
fruit, which is dark purple at 
first, becoming black when fully 
ripe, is of blackberry forrn with 
berries averaging inches 
long, and occasionally an inch 
longer. The flavor is distinc¬ 
tively its own but somewhat re¬ 
sembles the raspberry. As the 
sugar content is high, no sugar 
is needed with ripe berries. The 
seeds are very small and very 
few in comparison to other 
berries. Ten pounds of berries 
contain 8 pounds and 4 ounces 
of juice. Unsurpassed for jelly, 
jam, marmalade, or canning. 
100 plants will set out one- 
tenth of an acre and in Cali¬ 
fornia the Boysenberry has 
produced 13,000 pounds of 
fruit to the acre. Plants, 25c 
each; 10 for $2.00; 100 for 
$12.00. 
VESTAL PEACHES 
See page 42 
JOS. W. VESTAL & SON, Box 871, Little Rock, Ark. 
41 
