Hardy Fruits for the Home-Garden 

Apples 
Strong, 2-yr.-old, selected trees, 6 to 7 ft., 
34-in. and up cal., $2.50 each 
Baldwin. Large; deep red. 
McIntosh. A delicious, juicy aromatic red Apple. 
Delicious. Dark red eating Apple. 
Gravenstein. Red. 
Peaches 
Strong, selected trees, 6 to 7 ft., 34-in. and up 
cal., $2.50 each 
Belle of Georgia. Large; rich, creamy white flesh, 
bright red blush. Freestone. 
Elberta. Early September. Yellow skin, with deep 
red cheek; flesh golden yellow. 
J.H. Hale. Mid-September. Large, yellow fruit of 
excellent quality, wonderful color. 
Grapes 
Extra-strong, 2-year No. 1 plants 
70 cts. each; $7 per doz. 
Fredonia. An early-ripening black Grape. 
Catawba. Standard red Grape. Vigorous, hardy, 
and productive. 
Niagara. Popular white variety. Cluster large and 
compact. 
Blackberries 
Strong, rooted cuttings, 
$2.50 per doz.; $15 per 100 
Eldorado. Early to midseason. Berries are medium 
size, jet-black, and very sweet. 
Blowers. The canes are of strong growth, quite 
hardy, and yield a heavy crop. 
Raspberries 
Extra-strong plants, $2.50 per doz.; $15 per 100 
Indian Summer. Everbearing. Big, attractive, 
delicious berries. Bears spring, summer, and fall. 
Newburg. Midseason variety. Extra-large berries. 
Largest cropper. 
St. Regis. Well-known everbearing variety. 
Taylor. Late red sort. 
STRAWBERRY PLANTS 
Pot-grown, delivery April 1 to May 15 
Any variety: $2.50 per doz.; $6.50 for 50; $11 per 
100 prepaid for cash with order 
Field-grown plants, $4.50 per 100 
Chesapeake. Midseason to late. The berries are 
uniform In size and shape, bright crimson. Flesh 
firm and of excellent quality. 
Dorsett. Early. Largest in size, most attractive In 
appearance, heaviest in yield. Berries are bright 
red, shapely and of excellent flavor. 
Fairfax. Ripening just after Dorsett, this remark- 
able berry rules the second-early market. 
Premier. Excelled by no early variety. Produces 
vast quantities of berries of good size; attractive, 
and excellent quality. 
Redstar. Very late. The berries are large, glossy, 
bright red and do not turn dark. Considered more 
productive and of better quality than other late 
varieties. 
EVERBEARING STRAWBERRIES 
Streamliner. Firm, sweet berries, red all through. 
Very hardy and prolific. 
Field-grown, $7.50 per 100 
Mastodon. It outyields some of the finest June- 
bearing varieties during their season and continues 
to produce, throughout the summer and _ fall, 
berries of amazing size and surpassingly fine 
quality. Field-grown, $6 per 100 
Thornless Boysenberry 
Produces huge fruits, like Blackberries in general 
appearance, but frequently 2 inches in length. 
Should be trained to stakes or along wires. 
Strong plants: $2.50 per doz.; $15 per 100 
Vegetable Plants and Roots 
ASPARAGUS, Washington. 
1-year-old roots. $5 per 100; $45 per 1000 
2-year-old roots. $6.50 per 100; $60 per 1000 
3-year-old roots, extra-strong. $9 per 100 
HORSERADISH. Crowns. No. 1. 
$2.50 per doz. $12 per 100 
RHUBARB ROOTS, McDonald. 
$1.25 each; $12 per doz. 

WILLIAM M. HUNT & CO., Inc., 115 West 45th St., New York 19, N. Y. 
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