224 
An Addition to our List of Small Fruits. 
Our list of varieties of the small fruits has been heretofore very 
inadequate. The past season we have enlarged our collection by the 
addition of the names given below. It will be observed that not all 
of these are of the later introductions. In certain cases, we have 
purposely planted old varieties; sometimes because we desired them | 
as standards by which to judge the newer ones, and at others to use 
their valuable qualities as parents in the production of new varie- 
ties. 
Of the grapes, one vine of each was planted; of the strawberries, 
fifty plants of each; of the raspberries, blackberries and dewberries, 
six plants of each. The strawberry plants were set in two rows each 
fifty feet long, in one of which it is proposed to allow the runners to 
grow, and in the other the plants are to be kept strictly in hills. 
GRAPES. 
Agawam Lady 
Barry Lindley 
Brighton Niagara 
Catawba Pocklington 
Champion Poughkeepsie Red 
Concord Prentiss 
Karly Victor Rochester 
Empire State Salem 
Eumelan Ulster Prolific 
Highland Wilder 
Tsabella Woodruff Red 
Jessica Worden 
Unnamed seedling from Jas. M. Paul, N. Adams, Mass. 
STRAWBERRY. 
Bidwell Longfellow 
Charles Downing Manchester 
Cornelia May King 
Daisy Miller Mount Vernon 
Garretson Mrs. Garfield 
James Vick Parry 
Jersey Queen Piper’s Seedling 
Jucunda Primo 
Jumbo Prince of Berries 
Kentucky Sharpless 
Legal Tender Wilson 
Lennig’s White Woodruff No. 1 
Also, in autumn of 1885: thirteen plants Great American, and 
three plants of an unnamed seedling, both from R. Johnson, of 
Shortsville, N. Y. 
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