

INDIAN 
SUMMER 

NEW 
RED RASPBERRY 
Large, Disease-Resistant, Hardy 
A dish of big, red, juicy Raspberries, sprinkled with sugar and swimming 
in pure cream .. . there’s the life! Remember? Imagine having all the 
Raspberries you want on your breakfast cereal from the last of June into 
July, and again from mid-September till frost! 
That’s what Indian Summer does for you in your own garden. It gives 
you TWO delicious, mouth-watering crops a year, the second weeks after 
the regular season is over. 
Indian Summer is an extra special treat fresh from the garden. Makes 
tasty, scarlet-red sauce or pie, and the finest jam and preserves you ever tasted. 
Try them mixed with Rhubarb sometime. And freezing Raspberries is like 
having them fresh the year ‘round! 
This hardy, prolific, disease-resistant variety is easy to grow, requires little 
care, bears loads of big red berries. Developed by the N. Y. Agricultural 
Experiment Station, it is the best everbearing on the market. Commercial 
growers find it a little soft for long shipments, but excellent for local deliv- 
eries. Mr. A. L. Shuttleworth, prominent New York grower, says: “A yield 
of 5 tons of fruit (660 24-pint crates) to an acre has been harvested from 
the SUMMER crop here at my place.” 
Have plenty of these delicious berries this summer and fall. Fifty plants 
will give you enough for the table .. . 100 will supply an average family 
for canning or freezing, too. 
The New York State Agricultural 
Station Says: 
“Indian Summer, the first autumn fruiting variety of any merit that 
has fruited at this station, is a distinct type, wholly unlike and much 
superior to known varieties. The quality is good and the season is 
very early, starting a day or two later than the June variety. The fall 
crop commences in mid-September, continuing until stopped by hard 
frosts in early November. The bulk of the fall crop is borne in October. 
The plants are above medium to tall, vigorous, upright, hardy, healthy, 
productive. Fruit is large, uniform, maintaining size fairly well through- 
out the season, roundish conic, slightly irregular; cavity of medium size, 
smooth; bloom light; color medium red, soon turning dark; juicy; ten- 
der, mild sub-acid, good; season early, autumn-fruiting.” 
; {15} 

Dr. George L. Slate says: 
“When well grown the plants bear as heavy or 
heavier crops than most varieties. The variety is satis- 
factorily hardy in New York. The berries are large 
and of good quality. The fall crop is rather late in 
Northern States, but matures soon enough to be profit- 
able in the western part of this state. The plants do not 
become infected with mosaic even when grown near 
diseased plants under conditions favorable for trans- 
mitting the disease.” 
ME 
PRICES : 
Prepaid— 
6 12 
es 25 50 
ue se --$1.25 $2.25 $3 99 $7.15 ns : 
; Ndard 1.00 7/5} © ea 5.70 ie 
. 6 10.45 
be Prepaid— 200 5 
“yt., heavy ,.. - ne 
vs a eros $22.50 $42.75 $75.00 
18.00 34.209 60.00 
