BAKER NURSERIES 
SPECIAL GRADE COMMERCIAL PLANTING 
GRAPE VINES 
These vines will be one and two-year-old, light to very 
light tops, good rooted cutting, safe to plant into com¬ 
mercial vineyards, in the following varieties: Concord, 
Campbell Early, Moore Early, Ives, Fredonia and others. 
100 500 1,000 
$ 7.50 $35.00 $60.00 
GRAPES (New Varieties) 
PORTLAND.—Vine vigorous, hardy, productive, heal¬ 
thy; trunk of medium size, with loose, shreddy bark which 
separates into broad irregular strips. Flowers open about 
the middle of June, fertile; stamens upright. Fruit very 
early; clusters medium to large; green, amber where ex¬ 
posed to the sun, with thin skin, tough, separates readily 
from the pulp; fresh firm, with an abundance of uncolored 
juice, tender, aromatic, sweet, mild; quality very good. 
SHERIDAN.—Vine vigorous, healthy, hardy very pro¬ 
ductive. Flowers bloom with Concord, stamens upright. 
Fruit matures soon after Concord; clusters large, cylindri¬ 
cal, or slightly tapering, with a small shoulder, very com¬ 
pact; peduncle short. Berries large, round, adhere strongly 
to the pedicels, black, covered with thick, tender skin. 
CACO.—One of the most delicious of all grapes. Wine 
red or amber. Ripens ten days to two weeks earlier than 
the Concord. Fine, very strong, vigorous growers, healthy 
and prolific. 
SCUPPERNONG.—First found on an island in the 
Scuppernong River in North Carolina. It is the only white 
grape ever found wild. Ripens in August and September. 
Each 10 100 
Two-year-old vines _$ .75 $6.00 $35.00 
SCUPPERNONG (Black Muscadine) 
A true native muscadine, very hardy, vigorous growing- 
plants, producing a heavy crop of large black-purple fruit; 
excellent flavor, tender and sweet; ripens September. 
Each 10 100 
Two-year-old vines __$ .50 $4.00 $35.00 
BLACKBERRIES 
EARLY HARVEST.—Very early. Fruit medium in size; 
juicy, tender, mild and good. It has a long fruiting sea¬ 
son, carries well, and is especially good for canning. 
McDONALD.—One of the best blackberries grown. It 
is really a cross between the blackberry and the dewberry, 
combining the firmness and quality of the blackberry with 
the size, earliness and productiveness of the dewberry. 
The berries are large, and of good quality; enormously 
productive, out-yielding any other known variety of black¬ 
berry. Ripens very early, two weeks before Early Har¬ 
vest. McDonald requires a pollenizer in order to develop 
perfect berries. Early Harvest is a good variety to plant 
with McDonald. 
DALLAS.—A Texas berry, large, black, firm and a 
strong grower. Ripens in midseason. 
OZARK.—This blackberry is remarkable in many ways, 
and is superior to any blackberry grown where it has be¬ 
come known. It is hardy, stands drouth, begins to bear 
about the same time the Early Harvest does, has a much 
longer bearing season; has a berry about three times as 
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