S 
HIGGINSON, ARKANSAS eee 
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standard of excellence for table grapes and for marketing. Last of 
July. . 
Moore EARLY.—Very large, early, black, of the fine quality; 
a fine market grape; very healthy and prolific. 
R. W. MUNSON.—Special. Medium to _ large bunch; berry 
black; does not crack; pulp tender and quality good; ripens before 
Poot Should be planted near Concord or Brilliant for pol- 
enization. 
CONCORD.—The best known of all varieties of grapes; large, 
black; suited for table or market. Ripe in July. 
‘NIAGARA.—Large, greenish white; semi-transparent; quality 
good; a seedling of Concord; successful over a wide range of ter- 
ritory. Midseason. 
FREDONIA.—Vine vigorous, hardy, very productive, resistant to 
powdery mildew; canes long, numerous, thick, straight; buds open 
with Concord, thick; flowers fertile, with long upright stamens, 
leaves large, round, black, skin thick, medium in toughness, sep- 
arating from’ the flesh, pigment red, abundant, flesh greenish 
white, tender, solid, mild; quality very good. 
Each 10 100 1,000 
One-year-old vines ....$ .40 $ 3.50 $25.00 $200.00 
Two-year-old vines .... .65 6.00 50.00 500.00 
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 commercial vineyards, 
in the following varieties: Concord, Campbell Early, Moore Early, 
Ives, Fredonia and others. 
100 500 1,000 
$12.50 $60.00 $110.00 

BLACKBERRIES. 
EARLY HARVEST.—Very early. Fruit medium in size; juicy, 
tender, mild and good. It has a long fruiting season, 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 blackberry. Ripens very early, two weeks before Early 
Harvest. McDonald requires a pollenizer in order to develop per- 
fect berries. Early Harvest is a good variety to plant with Mc- 
Donald. 
DALLAS.—A Texas berry, large, black, firm and a strong grow- 
er. Ripens in midseason. 
~OZARK.—This blackberry is remarkable in many ways, and is 
superior to any blackberry grown where it has become known. It 
is hardy, stands drouth, begins to bear about the same time the 
Early Harvest does, has a much longer bearing seasen. 
BLOWER.—An old time variety grown more in the north and 
eastern part of the country, said to be very good, late. 
ma 
¢ Ex Dorapo.—A good grower, heavy canes’ more or less up- 
on Wee 
