Will do well on any soil that will produce a good corn crop. 
Land should be thoroughly prepared and well enriched; ground 
bone is one of the best fertilizers. Keep well cultivated and free 
from weeds and suckers. As soon as they have done bearing cut 
out the old wood to give more vigor to the young canes. Rows 
5 feet apart, plants 3 feet apart in rows. 
There is no question about the bright red Raspberries 
leading the markets in popularity, and bringing the best 
price. Consequently, experimenters have spent great 
efforts towards improving the older kinds. Our list offers 
the very best. 
PRICE of Red 
Raspberries: 
Chief . 
Cuthbert . 
Indian Summer 
Latham. 
Marcy . 
Newburgh .... 
St. Regis . 
Taylor . 
By Mail 
Postpaid 
10 | 100 
$0.80|$4.00 
.80| 4.00 
1.101 
.801 
1.251 
.85| 
.801 
.951 
6.50 
4.00 
7.50 
4.50 
4.00 
5.00 
By Express or 
Freight—Collect 
10 | 100 | 1000 
$0.60 
$3.50 $24.00 
.60 
3.50| 24.00 
.85 
6.001 50.00 
.60 
3.50| 24.00 
.95 
7.001 60.00 
.65 
4.001 28.00 
.60 
3.501 24.00 
.70 
4.50| 35.00 
Chief A new product from Minnesota derived from Latham. 
— Chief will not rival Latham, but supplements it by 
ripening 10 days earlier and so holding that wonderful type 
of picking an extra long season. In fact, Chief fills the 
gap for fresh table fruit between strawberries and other 
raspberries. Bright red, “no crumbling,” ships well, tastes 
delicious, and pays its way with extraordinary crops. 
- m i l 
The Epoch-Making Latham 
RED RASPBERRIES 
Cuthbert. Very large, conical berries, measuring 3 inches 
around, so firm they can be shipped hundreds of miles by 
rail in good condition ; flavor is sweet, rich and luscious. 
BLACKBERRIES 
Indian Summer (New.) Best of the so-called “everbear- 
1 " ■ ■ ing” raspberries, first popularized by St. 
Regis. This variety grows sturdy canes above medium 
height, which bear abundant crops ; first in June about the 
time of Chief; then again in September, with the bulkiest 
yield in October, clear up to the first frosts. The medium 
red berries are large, slightly irregular, inclined to crumble. 
Soft and luscious to the taste. Not sufficiently firm for far 
shipping, but very good for local market, and for vastly 
enjoyable home-garden use. 
Plant rows 6 feet apart, 3 to 5 feet in the row. Pinch 
canes back when they have reached 4 feet in height. 
By Mail 
Postpaid 
By Exp. or Frt. 
—Collect 
PRICES: 
10 
100 
10 
100 | 1000 
Blowers . 
$0.85 
$5.00 
$0.60 
$4.25|$30.00 
Eldorado . 
.85 
5.00 
.60 
4.251 30.00 
Early Harvest . 
.85 
5.00 
.60 
4.251 30.00 
Mersereau . 
.85 
5.00 
.60 
4.251 30.00 
Snyder . 
.85 
5.00 
.60 
4.251 30.00 
Latham the new mosaic-free hardy red 
. RASPBERRY. This type is certified absolutely 
mosaic-free, and acceptable anywhere. Perfectly hardy, 
withstanding Manitoba winters without protection. Its pro¬ 
duction is superlative, outyielding even Cuthbert. The ber¬ 
ries are large and round, brilliant red, with profitable ship¬ 
ping firmness. The color is a richly brilliant red, an eye- 
catcher on market stands, a delightful table feature, and a 
perfect canned exhibit. 
Blowers. Claimed to be the hardiest and most productive. 
Large size, jet black, good shipper, best quality. 
Early Harvest. Not hardy in the north and needs winter 
protection. Dwarf grower, enormous bearer, very early. 
Particularly good for the South. 
Eldorado. Hardy; berries large, jet black, borne in large 
clusters, and ripen well together; they are very sweet, melt¬ 
ing and pleasing to the taste; have no hard core, and keep 
8 or 10 days after picking with quality unimpaired. 
Marcy This new variety combines several important fea- 
- tures which elevate its rating far above older com¬ 
petition. The individual berry is very large, long-conic, 
firm, thick fleshed, medium red with a bright gloss ; mild 
in flavor and of very good quality. The plants are tall and 
sturdy, needing no support, bearing great quantities of 
fruit out in the open to be easily picked. 
Mersereati. Strong grower; upright, stout, stocky canes. 
An enormous producer of extra size berries which are bril¬ 
liant black and retain their color under all conditions ; sweet, 
rich, melting, without core. 
Snyder. Enormously productive, medium, sweet, the leading- 
early variety for hardiness. 
Newb urgh A quite new variety which is proving its worth, 
“ and becoming popular with the growers. New¬ 
burgh is a vigorous grower, hardy and productive. Its berries 
are large and do not “crumble” ; of attractive high color ; 
in quality somewhat superior to Latham which it precedes 
by a few days. Excellent keeper and shipper. 
St. Reg is (Ranere). Fruit commences to ripen with the 
earliest and continuing on young canes until 
October, many quarts often being picked after the first snow 
falls. Berries bright crimson, large size, rich, sugary, with 
full raspberry flavor. Flesh firm and meaty, a good shipper. 
Wonderfully prolific. Canes stocky, of strong growth, with 
abundance of dark green leathery foliage. Besides being a 
really fine variety, it has. the very valuable quality of pro¬ 
ducing in autumn, when there are no others. 
Taylor The New York Test Reports claim this 1935 intro- 
, n duction to be “the most promising new red Rasp- 
teny. * It ripens with good bright red color ; of long-conical 
shape, in extreme size. The flesh is thick and firm, with 
very small seed cavity, and complete lack of crumbling—- 
which assures its value for shipping. Comes in slightly 
betore Latham, and holds up well during a long season, 
producing tremendous crops. The taste ? Sub-acid, delicious ; 
you should try it! Easy to pick from its sturdy, upright 
oanes with only short, stubby pricklers. 
BOYSENBERRY 
This recent new development in bramble fruits bears a pro¬ 
digious crop of berries about 2 inches long, fat and juicy 
under the warming sun. These are delectable tid-bits for 
eating out of the hand, and fine glossy black units for table 
dessert or canning and have become exceedingly popular pre¬ 
pared as an unfermented autumn cordial. Should be trained 
on vines (like grapes) in spring; untied, laid down and 
mulched for winter. ! By Mail | By Exp. or Frt. 
| Postpaid | —Collect 
I 10 | 100 I 10 | 100 | 1000 
PRICE .|$1.15187.00 B $0.901$6.501$55.00 
Raspberries grown from tips are not usually avail¬ 
able for fall planting. This includes the popular 
“Black Cap” varieties, the luscious Purple kinds, and 
the choice Golden Queen. We will have supply of all 
these to offer in our next Spring Garden Book. 
Strawberries are not offered for fall planting, but 
next spring we will have our usual fine list of the 
best and most profitable varieties. 
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