PAGE SIX 
NOBLE NURSERY, NOBLE, OKLA. 
Ornamental Department 
SHADE TREES—More Chinese Elm than 
of all others. “There’s a reason.” Also Ca- 
talpa, both seedling and top grafted; Syca¬ 
more, Red Bud, American Elm, Poplar, Pin 
Oak, Soft Maple, Sugar Maple, Willow. 
ROSES—There are so many hundred good 
varieties of this Queen of Flowers that no 
one list can be complete. We offer about 30 
varieties and in each of them we have a fair 
supply. We have several other sorts, but not 
in sufficient numbers to justify listing. 
While we grow a few roses here, our main 
supply and best plants come from the Tyler 
district in Texas. Nearly all the roses sold 
in this part of the country are grown there. 
Many car loads go out of Texas to northern 
points, to come back later in smaller lots as 
“Northern roses.” Such roses as we offer 
cannot be grown in the north, and you can¬ 
not buy better ones, no matter what you pay, 
nor where you get them. 
REDS: Sensation, American Beauty, F. S. 
Keys, Etoile de Holland, E. G. Hill, Red Radiance. 
WHITES: Kaiserin, White American Beauty, 
White Killarney. 
PINKS: Betty Uprichard, Columbia, J. L. 
Mock, Dame Edith, Georges Pernet, Radiance 
Shell Radiance, Lady Ashtown. 
YELLOWS: Luxemburg, Joanna Hill, Lady 
Hillingdon, Roslyn. 
TINTS: Hoover, Talisman, Padre, Cuba, Wil- 
lowmere, Tip Top. 
CLIMBERS: Red Radiance, Talisman, Colum¬ 
bia, Pauls Scarlet. 
EVERGREENS — Having begun growing 
evergreens in a small way soon after the es¬ 
tablishment of our nursery in 1899, we have 
gradually increased our plantings and accu¬ 
mulated experience with them until they 
have become our leading specialty. We have 
discarded several fine ones that require too 
much nursing through August heat or are 
too tender for our winter blizzards, and our 
assortment is now recognized as one of the 
best in this section. 
We sell very little of this stock by corres¬ 
pondence. It is desirable that you visit the 
nursery, select your plants and let us dig with 
balls of earth and deliver them into your own 
conveyance. Delivery by truck or by car 
load freight can be arranged but we do not 
like to ship balled evergreens by local freight 
or express. 
JUNIPERS—Native Red Cedar, Platte River 
Cedar, Colorado Silver Cedar, Ozark White Cedar, 
Chinese Juniper, English Juniper, Irish Juniper, 
Lees Gold Tip Juniper, Cannarti Juniper, Sylves- 
tris Juniper, Spiny Greek Juniper, Spotted Juni¬ 
per, Blue Column Juniper, Savin Juniper, Pros¬ 
trate Juniper, Pfitzer Juniper, Kosters Juniper. 
ARBOR VITAES—Chinese, Excelsa, Dwarf 
Golden, Goldspire, Gracilis. 
PINES—Scotch, Austrian, Mugho, Native. 
TRUE CEDARS—Deodara Cedar, Mt. Atlas 
Cedar, Cedar of Lebanon. 
BROAD LEAF EVERGREENS—Abelia, Mahonia, 
Nandina, American Holly, Yaupon Holly, Privets, 
Pyracantha, Euonymus, Honeysuckle, Cherry 
Laurel. 
NEW AND SPECIAL EVERGREENS 
Young trees grown from seed often differ 
widely from each other and from the tree 
that produced the seed, hence every seedling 
tree is a possible new variety. Grafting 
and budding from selected types have given 
us the hundreds of fine varieties of fruits, 
nuts and ornamentals now so commen every¬ 
where. Several years ago we selected from 
our nursery and began to propagate 3 out¬ 
standing types of Juniper Scopulorum or 
Colorado Silver Cedar. All entirely hardy in 
our extremes of heat and cold. We offer 
these as follows: 
JUNIPER SCOPULORUM DEPRESSA GAREEI-— 
(Garee’s Spreading Juniper)—Low, spreading like 
a Pfitzer or Savin but of a distinct gray color. 
