TWENTIETH CENTURY FRUITS 
5 
The tree is a vigorous, healthy, rapid grower, and unusually pro- 
ductive. The fruit is very similar to its civilized parent, the common 
French prune, in form, size, color, and golden sweet rich flesh. The 
stone has heen eliminated wholly with the exception of a tiny speck. 
The fruit is so very valuable and the tree so very productive that I 
have consented to introduce it this season. Ripens with the common 
French prune and is in all respects very much like it in size, quality, 
and appearance. 
Trees, one year, 60c; three, $1.50; ten, $3. 
'■COXQUEST" PRUXE 
A New Cherry-The "Burbank" 
The earliest of all large cherries. The largest of all early cherries, 
and not only the best of all early cherries, but unsurpassed by any cherry 
of any season. 
The "Burbank" brought in the Eastern States, at the wholesale public 
auction sales in 1908, fifteen dollars per ten-pound box, and seven dol- 
lars and fifty cents per ten-pound box later in carload lots, and in 1909 
sold again in Philadelphia at the fabulous price of Thirty-One Dollars 
per box of ten pounds. Just three dollars and ten eeids per pound 
wholesale. 
The trees are models in form, vigor, and never-failing productive- 
ness. 
The foliage, which is of unusual size, is so placed that the fruit is 
fully protected from birds and cracking by late Spring rains. 
