Other Fruit Trees 
PEACHES, APRICOTS, SWEET CHERRIES, 
PEARS, are generally not successful northerly on the 
eastern slope of the Rockies, and we cannot guar¬ 
antee future results of trees. However, we can fur¬ 
nish above in good trees where desired. Write for 
prices. 
Write for prices on 1,000 lots of fruits. 
Special Home Orchard Values 
Save without risk 
COLLECTION “A”; Apples —2 Y.ellow Transpar¬ 
ent, 2 Wealthy, 2 McIntosh, 2 Delicious, 2 Jonathan, 
2 Northwest Greening. One dozen 3 to 5 ft. trees, 
7/16-9/16 in. caliper, for $5.35. 
COIiIiECTION “B”; Cherries —3 Montmorency, 3 
Early Richmond, 3 English Morello, 3 Osthieme. One 
dozen trees, 7/16-9/16 in. caliper, 2 y 2 ft. and up, for 
$4.15. 
COIiIiECTION “C”; Combination Orchard —2 De¬ 
licious Apple, 2 Wealthy Apple, 2 Montmorency Cher¬ 
ry, 2 English Morello Cherry, 2 German Prune Plum. 
2 Waneta Plum. All 7/16-9/16 in. caliper standard 
trees, for $5.50. 
Small Fruits 
For home use and market. 
Grapes 
Strong 2 yr. vines, post¬ 
paid at price each. Prices 
except Concord, ea. 25c; 
10, $2.25; 100. $20. Con¬ 
cord, ea., 20c; 10, $1.75; 
100, $15. 
BETA. Very hardy. 
Small black fruit for jell 
and juices. 
CONCORD. The widely planted blue-black grape. 
DIAMOND. Prolific, greenish-white, sweet juicy. 
Champagne variety. 
MOORES EARLY. Similar to Concord, ripening 
two weeks earlier escaping early frost. 
WORDEN. A slight improvement on Concord; a 
little earlier. Healthy. 
Currants 
Strong 2 yr. plants, postpaid at price each. 
CHERRY. A good standard, large, clear red 
variety. Early. Price each, 25c; per 10, $2.25; per 
100 , $ 20 . 00 . 
PERFECTION. The largest berried, most attrac¬ 
tive red currant on the market. Price each, 30c; per 
10, $2.75; per 100, $25.00. 
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