@otet BUSH and VINE FRUITS. 
Planting Aids. Mostly prefer well-drained, fertile, sandy loam soils. Grapes will do 
well in clay. Use same general planting methods as for shrubs and perennials. 
Plant in spring only. 
THE NEW THORNLESS BOYSENBERRY 
_The newest development in the most delicious berries you have ever eaten. Pro. 
digious crops of rich, tangy, juicy fruit borne on canes smooth as velvet. New Thorn- 
less Boyenberries ripen from ten days to two weeks earlier than the older types. The 
flavor—a combination of Raspberry, Dewberry and Loganberry, all packed into huge 
fruits nearly 2 inches long—makes them excellent for pies, canning and desserts. Their 
high sugar content makes them most desirable. $1.15 for 3; $2.50 for 10; $4.65 for 25; 
$14.00 for 100. 

Blackberry 
Caco. Delicious large red fruit. Lots of juice, and 
sturdy skins that make it a most desirable mid- 
season variety. 2-yr., No. 1, 60c each; $1.50 for 3; 
$4.50 for 10; $15.50 for 50. 
Concord Blue. Huge bunches of large, sweet, juicy, 
deep blue berries borne in prodigious quantities 
make this the world’s favorite blue Grape. The 
favorite in the market and wine trade. 2-yr., No. 1, 
50c each; $1.20 for 3; $3.50 for 10; $13.00 for 50. 
Concord Seedless. New. The first successful hardy 
seedless Grape. The deep blue color of Concord, 
its good sized berries, delicious flavor and richness, 
but has few if any seeds. 
for canning. Concord Seedless should not be 
planted among other Grapes as cross pollination 
may cause it to have seeds. l-yr., No. 1, $1.00 
A decided advantage 
BLACKBERRY 
Eldorado. Hardy, highly productive 
variety with sweet, melting flavor. 
Huge jet-black fruit borne in gen- 
erous clusters. Plant about 3 feet 
apart. $1.10 for 5; $3.30 for 25; 
$10.00 for 100; $35.00 for 500. 

Concord 
each; $2.50 for 3; $7.50 for 10. 
Niagara. The finest of all the white varieties. A dependable bearer pro- 
ducing enormous quantities each season. Large, round berries in compact 
bunches that are exquisitely sweet in flavor and fragrance. 2-yr., No. 1, 
55c each; $1.35 for 3; $4.00 for 10; $14.50 for 50. 

New Logan 
RASPBERRIES 
New Logan. (Black.) Quantities of immense, 
glossy black berries. Fruit firm and sweet, 
and very profitable for marketing. Midsea- 
son. $1.15 for 5; $1.80 for 10; $3.30 for 25; 
$9.90 for 100; $34.50 for 500. 
Latham. (Red.) Probably the most popular of 
all varieties because of its excellent ship- 
ping qualities and hardy, prolific vines. The 
fruit is a rich, brilliant red and plants are 
quite resistant to all Raspberry diseases. 
$1.50 for 5; $2.25 for 10; $4.10 for 25; $12.35 
for 100; $43.10 for 500. 
Indian Summer. The finer of. the so-called ever- 
bearing varieties. . The fruit is large, of good 
color and an excellent flavor and gives a 
good crop at about the time of Latham or a 
little later. It then follows with intermittently 
ripening clusters over the summer and gives 
a good fall crop. This is really one of the 
very finest berries for the home garden for 
the sturdy, erect bushes will, over the sum- 
mer, give almost twice as much fruit as the 
standard varieties. $1.50 for 5; $2.25 for 10; 
$4.10 for 25; $12.35 for 100; $43.10 for 500. 

Indian Summer 
[19] 



Boysenberry 
See pages 26 and 27 
for Fruit Trees 
ey, 
COLE’S STRAWBERRIES 
Will bear next year if planted this spring. Everbear- 
ing varieties will bear a late crop the year planted. 
Catskill. Large, shapely berries, bright red all the way 
through to the heart. Rich flavor and aroma. Mid- 
season. 
Premier. The king of berries. Very high quality, glossy 
red fruit of smooth, evenly conical form. It is large 
and bears the biggest crop of them all. Midseason. 
Senator Dunlap. The richest flavor of any Strawberry. 
Dark red, pointed berries in great abundance. A tre- 
mendous yielder, it is great for shipping. Midseason. 
Prices of Above Varieties: $1.05 for 25: $1.75 for 50; 
$2.80 for 100: $5.60 for 250; $8.75 for 500; $14.00 for 1000. 
EVERBEARING STRAWBERRIES 
A Continuous Crop In the Home Garden 
Evermore. (Minnesota 
1166.) A 1945- introduc- 
tion of excellent quality. 
Of fine appearance and 
is unusually sweet and 
firm and of fine quality. 
A very heavy bearing 
variety. When planted 
in the spring, will pro- 
duce a fine crop in July 
and from then until frost 
in the late fall. The fol- 
lowing season they will 
fruit with the early June 
varieties and after a 
short lay-off will bear 
continuously for the rest 
of the season. Berries are a dark red and the flesh 
is red completely to the center with no green tips or 
tops. $1.75 for 25; $2.90 for 50; $4.60 for 100; $9.20 
for 250; $14.40 for 500; $23.00 for 1000. 

Streamliner 
THE NEW STREAMLINER 
A 1946 introduction that surpasses any we have yet 
seen. Plants set in early spring, start to bear in July 
and are continuously in crop thereafter. Large, stream- 
lined berries ripen to a luscious juicy red all the way 
through without any sign of core, green tip or spots. 
Produces a large crop at the same time as standard 
varieties, and after a short lay-off produce again con- 
tinuously until frost. Unsurpassed quality. $2.25 for 25; 
$3.75 for 50; $6.00 for 100; $12.00 for 250; $18.75 for 500; 
$30.00 for 1000. 
