Benton County Nursery Co., Rogers, Arkansas 
Benton County Nursery Co., Rogers, Ark. December 3, 1935. 
Gentlemen: I purchased four shrubs from your nursery in November, 1934. They were two 
Monthly Roses and two Crape Myrtles. 1 planted these on my husband’s grave, and they 
are all living and in spite of the drouth the Roses began blooming the latter part of May 
and continued to bloom all summer. The Crape Myrtles are fine now and are 48 inches 
in height, which I am sure will bloom the next blooming season. 
Yours very truly, Mrs. G. R. Trammell, Everton, Ark. 
Benton County Nursery Co., Rogers, Ark. November 28, 1935. 
Dear Sir:—I want to tell you about my fruit trees I ordered from you in ApriL I re¬ 
ceived them in fine condition, and I thank you for the extra one. They have grown like 
weed's. They were not one foot high when I ordered them in April, and by July 31st,they 
measured four feet. You said they would grow like magic and they did. They have 
fall blooms on them, and all of my neighbors are astonished at them since they were so 
small when I got them. 
Yours very truly, Mrs. Cora Stewart, Rt. 1, Box 64, Ponta, Texas. 
Benton County Nursery Co., Regers, Ark. October 25, 1935. 
Dear Sir:—In the spring of 1934 I ordered six Elberta Peaches and six Concord Grape 
vines. Five Elberta Peaches lived and I saved three of the Grapes out of. six. At this 
time I wou.d just give one of my Elberta Peach trees for the amount that I paid for 
them, but if I had it to do over again I would order in the fall, and plant in the fall. 1 
think the fall is the best time to plan . This country is adapted for fruit trees, either 
home use or market. When I order from now on, I will order from the Benton Conn y 
Nursery Company. Yours as ever, Andy Stine, Piedmont, Missouri. 
Benton County Nursery Co., Rogers, Ark.; December 3, 1935. 
Gentlemen: The experience I have had with the fruit trees I ordered last fall, 1934, luw 
been so unusual that I wish to write you of it. Of the sixty apple trees and twenty peach 
trees planted on my farm in Searcy Valley, Arkansas, there are eighty thriving treo. 5 in 
my orchard—exactly 100 per cent are living. Upon discovering this fact during a recent 
visit to my farm, I marveled at the experience since it is such a contrast with the results 
from an order with another firm during the previous fall. From that order made witn 
a well established nursery only three trees Cut of twenty-five lived—12 per cent. 
The conation's under which both plantings were made were practically the same and the 
varieties mainly the same, though the price 0 f the previous order was much higher. By 
comparing these results, naturally I favor Benton County Nursery and am resolved to add 
yearly to my orchard trees from your nursery Sincerely,Mrs. E. V. Glars, Sweetwater, Texas. 
Benton County Nursery Co., Regers, Ark. October 29, 1935. 
Gentlemen:--In the early spring of 1934, I oidered a supply of your g fruit trees—Apples, 
Pears, Peaches, Plums, Cherries, Grape's, ect., from you to start an orchard. We 
received the stock in good order and planted it accordingly. Everything lived and 'sprout¬ 
ed in the spring. Altogether, we bought fifty or sixty very young trees from you—the 
smallest an< cheapest size you sell My mother came out and laughed at my young “or¬ 
chard”. She said it looked like some plowed land with a few switches stuck up here and 
there. So she very magnificently made us a present of 200 trees bought from' some 
where else. They were large and handsome with big roots and fat buds on them when 
they arrived. We were very glad to get them, asd planted them according to directions. 
Everything did wel luntil the drouth hit us. But as the drouth went on, the big trees be¬ 
gan to wither and dry up. One after the other they disappeared, until by the end of the 
summer of 1934 every one of the 200 big trees that had been given us were dead, 
with only about half a dozen cf the brave little “switches” that we bought from you 
had gone under. Your -switches have done a lot of growing phis summer. A lot of the fruit 
trees bloomed and we ate grapes off the vines, and we hope to fill in the bare space where 
the grand trees were with some more tiny on es from you this winter. 
Yours truly, Mrs. Carrington Jones, 1906, Kendale, Memphis,Tennessee. 
