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Ontario Grapes 
Fruits 
CHERRIES 
Black Tartarian. Sweet. Purplish-black with splendid flavor. Tree 
vigorous and productive 
Montmorency. 
caliper trees. 
THESE ARE 2-YEAR, NO. 1 PLANTS 
Caco. Wine red, large, sweet, delicious; bunches compact. 
Concord. 50c. each, 10 for $4.00. 
Concord. Blue black. 
50c. each, 10 for $3.50. 


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Asparagus 

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Rhubarb 
Well known, practical and most widely planted variety. 
Fredonia. Earliest good black Grape. Ripens two weeks 
before Worden. Vigorous. 50c. each, 10 for $4.00. 
Golden Muscat. White; very large, late, sweet, with 
fine muscat flavor. $1.00 each, 3 for $2.70. 
Niagara. White; sweet; large compact bunches. _Mid- 
season. 50c. each, 10 for $4.00. 
Ontario. New, early white. 
10 for $4.00. 
A favorite. 
GRAPES 
Grapes are ideal for the home 
garden for they require little 
space or care and serve a wide 
variety of uses. They make dec- 
orative vines for porches or trel- 
lises, furnish shade and produce 
healthful and delicious fruits. 
Ripens just before 
Wonderful flavor; large, 
compact bunches. Hardy. Strong grower. 
Large, light red. Midseason 
into bearing young. Most productive sour Cherry. 2 year, 11/16 in. 
$2.00 each. 
Hy 
brid Blueberries 
Governor Wood. Sweet. Large, light yellow with a red cheek. Heart- 
shaped. Early and one of the best. 
Napoleon (Royal Ann). Sweet. 
Large; delicious flavor; excellent for canning. Midseason. 
1 yr. trees, 9/16 in. cal., $2.00 each 
Pale yellow with bright red blush. 
Tree comes 
& 

Worden. Blue-black. Excellent quality; ripens a week before Concord. 50c. each, 10 for $4.00. 
RASPBERRIES 
Cumberland. A fine black Raspberry. Hardy, productive, dependable, and disease-resistant. 
Indian Summer. A splendid, new, everbearing, red Raspberry. Delicious flavor. A grand 
kind for home gardens. Heavy crops m June and again in the Fall. 
Latham. Bright red, Jarge and firm. Delicious flavor. Plants are strong and yield tremendous 
crops. This is the Jeading Red Raspberry. 
Sodus. New. Rich, wine-purple berries of excellent 
10 for $1. 
Bears very heavy crops. 
uality and flavor. Large and firm. 
, 25 for $3.50, 100 for $12.00 
Be sure to cut the canes back, within a few inches of the ground, immediately after planting. 
BLACKBERRIES 
Eldorado. Vigorous, hardy and prolifrc. Berries are large, jet 
black, and borne in large clusters which ripen well together. 
Flavor is good. No hard core. 
10 for $1.50, 25 for $3.00, 100 for $9.00 
THORNLESS BOYSENBERRY 
Boysenberry. A new berry of huge size and 
fine flavor. Juicy; vigorous grower; smooth- 
stemmed type. 
3 for $1.00, 10 for $2.50, 25 for $5.50 
ASPARAGUS 

Mary Washington. Rust-resistant. Recog- 
nized as the leading variety. Asparagus will 
grow in any garden soil but to produce the 
largest, most tender stalks the soil must. be rich 
and well fertilized. Set plants so that crowns 
are about 3 in. (not deeper) below the surface 
in trenches 1 foot deep. Plant about 18 in. 
apart. Plant in April. Strong, 1 yr. roots, 
25 for $1.50, 50 for $2.50, 100 for $4.00. 
RHUBARB 
Myatt’s Victoria. The stalks are unusually 
tender and bright pink in the early Spring. 
The flavor is pleasantly tart. You will hardly 
recognize the old-fashioned ‘‘Pie Plant’ in 
this delightfully improved form. 35c. each, 
10 for $3.00. 


Montmorency Cherry 
BLUEBERRIES 
These new, cultivated Blueberries have 
been so improved that they produce won- 
derfully large, plump, tender fruits of deli- 
cious foe It is essential that they be 
planted in groups of more than one variety 
in order to insure cross pollination. 
Besides producing this superb fruit, 
these plants are ornamental at all times of 
the year. They are suitable to include in a 
shrub border, growing about 6 feet or more 
high and their Fall coloration is brilliant. 
Blueberries require an acid soil contain- 
ing an abundance of vegetative matter, 
like peat, moderate soil moisture and good 
drainage. Plant about 4 feet apart. Blue- 
berries require pruning to maintain large 
sized fruits. 
We offer the following varieties of 
fruiting age: Strong, transplanted, 
3 yr. plants at $2.25 each, 3 for $6.00 
Listed in order of ripening 
Cabot. Early. Large fruits of excellent 
quality, slightly acid; plants are lower 
and more spreading than other kinds. 
Rancocas. Large, light blue, firm and 
attractive. Fruits ripen after Cabot. 
Concord. Large berries borne in Grape- 
like clusters. Fine in flavor and appear- 
ance. Midseason. 
* Pioneer. Sweet, light blue berries. Mid- 
season. Plants are especially ornamental. 
Rubel. An excellent and dependable 
yielder. Plants are tall, vigorous, pro- 
ductive. The standard late variety. 
Jersey. Large berries which keep well. 
Acid. Late. Plants vigorous and upright. 



Latham 
