Quality Nursery Stock Since 1886 
3 
Quinces 
60 cents each, $6.00 per dozen. 
The Quince likes a rich, deep, moist and at 
the same time loose soil, and requires careful 
cultivation. The fruit is only used in a cooked 
state and it is a great favorite with the house- 
wife owing to its rich aroma, which makes it 
fit for all kinds of preserves and jellies. 
Orange — Large, roundish, bright golden yel- 
low; cooks tender and is of excellent flavor. 
Valuable for preserves and flavoring; very pro- 
ductive; one of the most popular and exten- 
sively cultivated of old varieties. Ripens in 
October. 
Champion— Fruit very large, fair and hand- 
some. Tree very productive, bears when young; 
flesh cooks as tender as the apple; flavor very 
delicate, imparting an exquisite taste and odor 
to any fruit with which it is cooked. 
Almonds 
The almond succeds in Western Texas, Ari- 
zona and New and Old Mexico and California, 
where irrigation is practiced. The tree blooms 
very early, and the crop is often destroyed by 
late frosts. 
Sultana — Large kernels, soft shells. Tree is 
strong, upright grower, and it is one of the 
best. 4 to 6 feet, 50 cents each. 
Pecans 
2 to 3 feet, $1.00 each, $10.00 per dozen; 4 to 5 
feet, $1.50 each, $15.00 per dozen; 7 to 8 feet, 
$3.00 each; 8 to 9 feet, $5.00 each. 
This is by far the choicest table nut that is 
grown in America. Each year the demand is 
increasing; the supply can never equal the de- 
mand for good nuts. They are a healthful, nu- 
tritious article of food. Plant a tree if you 
have only a small place, and a thousand trees 
if you have the land for them. You can count 
on a good income for your children and your 
grandchildren. The pecan tree grows on any 
deep soil, clay with gravelly sub-soil preferred. 
If you have a river bank that washes badly and 
you want to make this ground valuable, we can 
enlighten you, by advising to plant it in a 
pecan orchard; after the trees are 4 to 5 feet 
high plant the ground in Bermuda grass for 
sod, and you have more than doubled the value 
of your land. If it’s a shade tree you want to 
plant this winter, stop and think it over; why 
not plant a pecan tree? 
Lone Star — Seedling of the Daisy pecan. 
Larger and thicker, slightly harder shell; a 
wonderful bearer, fills well, a fine grower, 
large leaves, same as its parent, the Daisy. 
We offer only a few trees the first time. 2 to 
3 feet at $4.00 each. Only one tree sold in one 
order as they are very limited. 
“Daisy” — Takes the first place of all com- 
mercial nuts; is not only the largest paper 
shell in existence, but it is well filled, of a 
fine, sweet flavor; a regular bearer and it has 
not failed to bear a good crop since it first 
began in 1894. 
Frotscher — -A large oblong nut, bright yellow- 
ish brown in color, with a few purplish black 
markings, shell very thin, cracking easily, ker- 
nels large, easily removed, full of good quality. 
One of the handsomest nuts grown. 
Schley — Size medium to large, oblong, some- 
what flattened; light reddish brown with a few 
markings of purplish brown; shell thin, separ- 
ating easily from the kernel, kernel full, plump, 
bright yellowish brown in color, flavor rich 
nutty, in quality one of the best. Tree a good 
grower and an excellent variety. 
Stuart — One of the oldest of the named va- 
rieties, but somewhat short; ovoid in shape, 
shell thin, partitions somewhat corky, kernel 
plump, quality very good. 
Success Pecan— Originated in Southern Mis- 
sissippi. Large size, shell thin, kernel very 
plump, quality good, flavor good; highly pro- 
lific; one of the very best and most promising 
sorts. 
Van Deman — A large nut averaging from 45 
to 50 nuts per pound; oblong in form; shell 
quite thin, quality good; tree vigorous grower, 
prolific bearer. 
