NEW GARDEN FRUITS 
SPARKLE STRAWBERRIES. Delicious Red Fruit—The Finest for Freezing 
Sparkle is the finest new variety to appear in many years. Vigorous and 
highly productive, it has good size, bright red color and excellent quality. 
Delicious to eat fresh, it excels all others for freezing, as the berries stay firm 
and fresh-tasting and have a rich appetizing flavor. 
Sparkle ripens in midseason and produces astonishing crops over a long 
period. It is hardy, resistant to Red Stele root disease and well adapted in 
New York and neighboring states. The berries are medium-sized, rounded 
in shape and the color is a bright glossy red giving a beautiful sparkling 
appearance. Very high in yield, this new berry is excellent for both home 
and market growers. 
25 for $1.40; 50 for $2.10; 100 for $3.25, postpaid. Not paid: 1,000 for $18.50. 

SEPTEMBER RASPBERRIES. Bears A Real Crop in the Fall 
We are proud to introduce September, the newest and best autumn-fruiting 
raspberry. Developed by Dr. George L. Slate of the Geneva Experiment 
Station, it bears so early in the fall that the whole crop ripens before freezing 
weather. The round, bright red berries are good-sized, sweet and of fine 
flavor. They are firm and do not crumble, and they are wonderful to eat. 
September bears two crops a year—the first in late June, the second and 
best crop in September and October, and these delicious berries coming out 
of season are a real treat. Widely adapted, hardy and productive, it should 
be in every garden. Supply limited—order early. 
Strong 1 year plants: Doz. $4.85; 25 for $7.90; 50 for $14.25 postpaid. 

VALENTINE RHUBARB. New—Large Stalks—Fine Quality 
Long thick stalks, deep red outside and bright red all 
the way through make Valentine the outstanding new 
rhubarb that everyone will want. Sauces or pies made 
from it are a beautiful rich crimson, sweeter and more 
flavorful than the ordinary rhubarb. Its color and qual- 
ity will be welcomed by home and commercial growers 
and it is excellent for freezing. 
The latest and finest of the seedless red rhubarbs de- 
veloped at MacDonald College in Canada, Valentine is 
hardy, and heavy yielding. We highly recommend it. 
Large root divisions: $1.25 each; 3 for $3.00 postpaid. 
See pages 74-76 for other roots, small fruits, etc. 

SNAPDRAGONS IN JULY 
If you set out our bushy polled plants in May, they will start blooming 
in July and continue to produce long well filled spikes of large flowers 
until late fall. Under Northeastern weather conditions, Harris’ 
Colossals are superior to all others with which they have been com- 
pared in our Test Gardens here at Moreton Farm. Our mixture con- 
tains white, shades of pink, yellow, orange and crimson. 
MIXED COLORS only: Doz. $2.50; 25 for $4.50 postpaid. 
We cannot ship less than a dozen. Plants shipped after May 
10th. No plants shipped west of Indiana or south of Virginia. 


GOLD BANDED LILY 
Our customers who planted the Gold Banded or Auratum lily before 
the war cut off the supply, used to write us that they grew them as 
“tall as a 6 ft. man and as big as a soup plate” with photographs en- 
closed to prove it! We have seen as many as twelve large blooms on 
a single stalk. The color is ivory white with a gold band down the 
center of each petal. Chocolate brown dots on the petals give the 
large very fragrant blooms a distinctive elegance. 
Each $1.00; 3 for $2.75; Doz. $10.00. Shipped only in May. 

