> 
“my 
tI] 
I wl i if 
3 gee ww"! i i 1 
Se < \ f f 
TODAY FRUIT GROWING 
is making inroads cn the big farms—little orchards 
jead the way to a profitable and worth-while fruit 
market. 
GET YOUR ORDER IN EARLY. Growers with a vision to the future should capitalize 
You get the biggest dollar’s 
now by planting new orchards. 
in quality and price. 
Ith your 
lantwit 
4. \ Harrisons’ | 
i Bud sevecteo 
Super Strain 
FRUIT TREES 
ig fs lend oe 
Facts Worth Reading About 
Alive Healthy Fruit-Bearing Trees Depend 
on the Heredity of Your Trees 
In the summer_and early fall of each year, while 
fruit was on the trees, the utmost care was exercised 
in selecting the new “‘budding stock’’ for the young 
Harrison fruit trees developing in the nursery. 
By our practical method of propagation and desire 
to furnish nothing but the true-to-name varieties, we 
never realized, at the time, that this Harrison method 
of propagation was ultimately to revolutionize the 
industry. 
You Pay No More for Harrisons’ 
““Bud-Selected” Trees 
The “‘bud-selection’’ method to propagate fruit 
trees is very expensive—but whatever the expense they 
are the trees that give satisfaction. 
Operating with 1750 acres of bearing orchards, 
with a trained organization and personnel operating 
twelve months each year, we are organized on a large 
production basis, all of which reflects lower prices for 
the commercial grower and the home owner. 
Remember the inborn inheritance is the final quality 
built into Harrisons’ stock. 
Dependable Nurserymen Propagate 
from Bearing Orchards 
If fruit trees are continuously propagated from the 
nursery rows, as practiced now by a large percentage 
of nurserymen, because it is cheaper, fruit trees begin 
to degenerate—and when the original was a poor type, 
the nurseryman, without knowing it, continues to re- 
produce poor, undesirable, small type fruit. In- 
cidentally, in case there was a mixture in the nursery 
rows, how could a nurseryman propagate true-to-name 
trees successfully. We are orchardists and nursery- 
men, and nothing can compare with our scientific 
method of “bud selection’’—it always gives complete 
satisfaction. 
Harrisons’ “Bud Strains” 
Some fifty years ago, and almost every year since, 
Harrisons’ have planted orchards, not alone for fruit 
but principally to secure the type of parent fruit 
tree that was characteristic of a “variety’’ domi- 
nating in bearing qualities coupled with health, vigor, 
and ability to withstand changeable climatic condi- 
tions—this type of a tree was to become the parent 
supplying the budding sticks for future orchards in 
America and true-to-name varieties were assured. — 
[4] 
worth from Harrisons’, both © 
