-i-A*. 
FALL 1934 
IV 
and 
SPRING 193 5 
★ APR 2 7 1935 * 
U. S. Dep«r1?r>!?? A ■ 
Stabler black walnut has thinnest shell 
of all black walnuts. Some of the kernels 
come out in one solid piece, notin two halves. 
Delicious flavor. Carton of nuts, approxim¬ 
ately 1 lb., sent postpaid anywhere in U. S. 
for 25c. 
Attention is called to smallest size of 
grafted chestnut trees. Stock of these is 
less short than of the others, and they are 
sturdy transplanted trees that should grow 
off nicely. Seedling trees do well as pollin- 
*ors and also produce interesting nuts. 
4° 
Yea rs of experiment with 
nut trees, suitable for cold 
climates, enables me to 
recommend to you . . . 
This Van Fleet chestnut tree, a chinchinq hybrid, 
is bearing 20 nuts or more. The small size of the tree 
is shown by the man who holds the sheet. It is the 
usual thing for these trees to bear at this small size 
and to keep it up. It is a hybrid of the blight re¬ 
sistant Chinese chestnut and the American chin¬ 
quapin—the one American species that resists the 
blight. 
Blight Resistant Chestnut Trees 
Early Bearers 
Grafted Black Walnuts 
Dignified and Useful Trees 
A Good Crop 
Grafted Hybrid Hickories 
Surprising and Beautiful Trees 
Hardy Grafted Northern Pecans 
Majestic and Fruitful Shade 
Have Fun, Nuts and Beauty -1_ 
from Your Shade Trees Persimmons 
Ripening before Frost—Delicious 
J. RUSSELL SMITH • ROUND HILL • VIRGINIA/ 
