W4iat Others Say About Our Trees, Plants, Etc, 
Benton County Nursery Co., Rogers, Ark. October 14, 1934. 
Gentlemen:—I want to tell you about the success. 1 have had with your small size fruit 
trees. I set out a small family size orchard of Peach, Plum, Apple, Cherry and Apricot 
trees in the 'spring of 1933. I used your 1 to 2 ft. trees. True, they were small, but you 
ought to see them now, October, 1935. They bore a few specimens this past summei. I 
never saw finer cherries than the 2 or 3 dozen I let stay on the trees. 1933 and 1934 
were extremely hard 'summers to take trees through, but I never watered a tree and 1 
never U>st. a tree. A good root system and good cultivation did the job. The beauty of these 
small trees is that I can trim and shape to suit. 
Yours truly, J. H. Hutchins, Box 32, Davis, Oklahoma. 
Benton County Nursery Co., Rogers, Ark. November 30, 1935. 
Gentlemen:—I am in receipt of your letter wanting to know what success I had will your 
stock. It was marvelous. Others may have as good stock as yours, but it has not been 
my fortune to find it. I know none have any better regarldess of what they say or 
charge. Last March I planted around 200 of your trees on my farm near Four Oaks, N.C. 
I have had no success with spring planting even when not so late, but practically all *hese 
trees are living and thriving. Next summer I will make a picture of these trees and send 
you so you may see why I am «o enthusiastic about them. I like your trees so well, I am 
going to plant mire of them this year in December and January, therefore, would appre¬ 
ciate a new catalogue. 
Yours truly Alice Poole McNeill, State School, Wrentha, Mass. 
Benton County Nursery Co., Rogers, Ark. November, 12, 1935 
Dear Sir:—I w r ant to thank you for your folder received and to thank you for your honest, 
business-like treatment. May I -state that I have worked four years for a nursery and 1 
claim to know tree when I see one. I have bought fruit trees, nut trees, vines, etc., from 
five different nurseries in the past 15 years. In some of my orders I got plenty San Jose 
scale and some cases trees were not true to label. In 1931 I gave you my first order for 
Peaches, Plums and Apricots. The trees wer e 3 feet, free from disease and had a fine 
root system. With the aid of Yz pound cotton seed meal these trees reached a heighth of 
6 feet by fall. All frees have proven true to label and while I have not kept tab on the 
amount of fruit the yield has been highly satisfactory. Then, too, your prices should meet 
with the approval of any fair minded person, know a good many nurserie r, but I always re¬ 
commend Benton County Nursery to my friends. Count on me for a few specials this 
winter. Yours for success, D. P. Wilson, Strong, Arkansas. 
Benton C-unty Nursery Co., Roger.s, Ark. November 22, 1935. 
Gentlemen:—In the spring of 1931 we purch ase< ^ nine peach trees, nine apple trees and 
j thirty-three Concord grape vines from your “Special Bargain” sheet in your regular 
I catalog. The peach and apple trees were 9c each, from 1 to 2 ft. high, just switches with- 
) out a limb on them but nice little trees at that, and the grape vines were 3c each. 
Twenty-nine grape vines lived and grew fine, and in 1933 they had a few grapes on them. 
In 1934 and 1935 I got a bushel basket of fine, sweet grapes off of them and canned them 
for our own use. I am looking for them to do even better than that as they grow older. 
From the middle of June till the middle of September, when the Early Mayflower 
Peaches were ripe, we ate peaches off the trees and had peaches and cream on the table 
and gave several gallons away. I canned lu quarts. The assortment we got gave us an¬ 
other tree to ripen soon as the last ones were gone. The apple trees have grown fine and 
give premise of nice fruit in the future if nothing happens to them. I surely don’t think 
anyone would make a mistake in buying these little trees, since they lived and made fair 
sized trees quicker than some 3 or 4 year-old-trees we had previously purchased from nur¬ 
series in Kansas and Iowa. When we buy more trees, you shall have our order. 
Your truly, Mrs. Art Trabue, Rt. 1, Earlton, Knns. 
