34 
FRUIT TREES 
We offer only No. 1 stock. The first cost of a 
tree is always the least. It pays to get the best 
rather than spend money and time on a cull for 
years and have it amount to nothing, or turn out 
to be untrue to name. 
NUMBER OF TREES REQUIRED PER ACRE 
Distance Apart Each Way Number of Plants 
12 
ft. 
. 302 
15 
ft. 
193 
20 
ft. 
. 108 
30 
ft. 
. 48 
40 
ft. 
. 27 
50 
ft. 
. 17 
Ask For Special Delivered Quotations on Large 
Quantities 
Peaches 
Our peach trees are grown by men who have 
been growing good ones since they were boys, 
thirty years ago, and they know how to produce 
the best and do so. 
Do not confuse these year old trees on two year 
roots with the cheap “June bud” whose root is 
only a year old and whose top only a few months. 
Gain time and save expense of a year’s cultiva¬ 
tion by using our “dormant budded” large size 
trees. We dig with a machine that gets plenty 
of roots, and after proper handling practically 
no loss results from transplanting. They are 
true to name. We cannot recall when we have 
had a complaint of untrueness. 
Each Per 10 Per 25 Per 50 
4 to 6 ft. trees 50c 40c 35c 30c 
3 to 4 ft. trees 40c 35c 30c 25c 
2 to 3 ft. trees 35c 30c 25c 20c 
Listed in Order of Ripening 
The best of the old and the best of the new va¬ 
rieties. 
MAYFLOWER:—Earliest to ripen. Latest bloom¬ 
er; seldom killed by frost. Red, juicy, white 
flesh, semi-cling. 
EARLY ROSE:—Bright red skin, medium large, 
sweet, delicious white flesh. Hardy, good com¬ 
mercial variety. Cling. 
GOLDEN JUBILEE:—The new early peach which 
is creating a sensation. A cross between 
Greensboro and Elberta, it is said to have in- 
