Dahlias cannas gladious . in June. The last fruit that we picked of the St. Regis was on November 7th at which timethe plants were in full foliage; although previous to this the mercury had registered 28° On September 30th we saw some nice looking red raspberries on exhibition atthe Interstate Fair at Trenton, N. J. They had just come from bushes and lookedas fresh and luscious as early summer berries. The variety is called the St. RegisEverbearing and it was exhibited by J. T. Lovett, Little Silver, N. J. Farm Journal,(Dec, 1910.) Jewell Co., Kansas, Dec. 19, 1910. In the Red Raspberry, St. R


Dahlias cannas gladious . in June. The last fruit that we picked of the St. Regis was on November 7th at which timethe plants were in full foliage; although previous to this the mercury had registered 28° On September 30th we saw some nice looking red raspberries on exhibition atthe Interstate Fair at Trenton, N. J. They had just come from bushes and lookedas fresh and luscious as early summer berries. The variety is called the St. RegisEverbearing and it was exhibited by J. T. Lovett, Little Silver, N. J. Farm Journal,(Dec, 1910.) Jewell Co., Kansas, Dec. 19, 1910. In the Red Raspberry, St. Regis Ever-bearing you have one of the most wonderful raspberries I have ever tested. I got plantsof St. Regis from you last spring and they all grew and done well. There were niceberries on it all summer. J. P. Leaf. Grundy Co., Iowa, Dec. 23, 1910. The St. Regis Raspberry from you allgrew; they were nice, clean, healthy plants. The canes were heavily loaded; the size,color and quality of the fruit was O. K. H. J. T. LOVETT, LITTLE SILVER, N Monmouth Nursery. Superb Dahlias AVithin the past few years the Dahlia has grown in popular favor to aremarkable degree; and well it may, for the varieties of to-day are suchgreat improvements upon those formerly grown that they rival the bestChrysanthemums—which some of them closely resemble. There are, indeed,few flowers so pure and rich in color, or so graceful and decorative as thechoicer varieties of this flower. Blooming as they do, in the autumn (in ad-vance of the Chrysanthemum), they give us flowers at a season when theyare much needed. Being a favorite flower of the proprietor of the Xurseryand his sons, we are growing Dahlias as a special feature, both for cut bloomand the roots; and we may add we have been so successful with them, par-ticularlv the single varieties, that we were awarded the first premium bythe AMERICAN INSTITUTE and a certificate of merit by the NEWYORK FLORISTS CLUB in 1906 and nine firs


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