TOLLESON NURSERIES 
PEAR 
Price: 5-6 ft., each $1.25. 
BARTLETT — Large size, 
with beautiful blush; buttery, 
very juicy and high flavored; 
bears early. 
PEACH 
Price: 4-5 ft., each $1.25 
ELBERTA —A clear yellow 
with blush, fine grained and sweet. Tree a strong grower with a 
tendency to thin itself, carrying moderate loads of fruit. 
Elberta 
MONTMORENCY —A fine 
large fruited cherry, some¬ 
what like Richmond, but al¬ 
most a month later in ripen¬ 
ing. The flesh is tender, 
juicy and not quite so sour. 
Pine for pie-making. Trees 
are hardy and heavy bearing. 
PLUMS 
Price: 5-6 ft. each, $1.25; per 10, $11.00. 
BLUE DAMSON —Deep purple fruits of delicious quality. One of 
the best for marketing as it stands handling well. Tree vigorous, 
hardy and resists disease remarkably well. 
GERMAN PRUNE —Large, long-oval, purple, with a thick blue 
bloom; flesh firm, sweet and pleasant, separating from the stone. 
HANSKA —August. Large red, apricot flavor. Very good quality. 
ITALIAN PRUNE —Probably most widely planted. The delicious, 
juicy fruits with purplish-black skins and greenish-yellow flesh are 
sub-acid and free stone. 
Lombard 
Plum 
LOMBARD —Medium, roundish-oval, violet-red, juicy and pleas¬ 
ant; adheres to stone, valuable market sort, hardy and adapted to 
light soils; a reasonably sure cropper. 
SAPA —July. Medium size. Fruit 
purple with red flesh. Juicy and 
very good. 
UNDERWOOD — An attractive, 
large, red plum with firm, juicy 
flesh and a small pit. Cling stone, 
but hangs to the tree well and 
ripens over a long period. Tree 
large and hardy, fruit large. 
WILD GOOSE —July. One of the 
older varieties but very desirable. 
Large, red and prolific. 
RED WING —One of the largest; 
early fruiting; heavy and regular 
bearer; very hardy. A really valuable plum that should be in every 
orchard. Free stone and mid-season. 
SMALL FRUITS 
The red raspberry is an ideal home garden subject; and there are 
varieties, such as the St. Regis, that 
bear all season. These are especially 
good for planting in the small garden. 
Black raspberries are easily grown, 
though they spread over considerable 
room with their drooping habit. Black¬ 
berries should be used only where their 
customs of sending out long suckers will 
not annoy. Currants make large bushy 
shrubs which can be grown in mass 
plantings, provided they are not crowd¬ 
ed. Gooseberries have a somewhat Similar 
habit of growth and are easily handled, 
large, brilliant red, fine flavor. 
For a trellis, an arbor, a pergola, or 
to clothe a fence, grapes are unrivaled. 
Their blossoms are fragrant and their 
fruits have great decorative value. 
Alfred Blackberry 
RASPBERRIES 
Price: 2 yr. No. 1, each 10c; per 
dozen $1.00; per hundred, $6.00. 
CUMBERLAND, BLACK— Largest 
black raspberry known; unusually 
strong grower, perfectly hardy. The 
most profitable raspberry grown. 
LATHAM, LARGE RED —Disease 
resistant. Outcrops all others. Berries 
large, brilliant red, fine flavor. Plants 
very hardy. 
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