GREEN’S NURSERY COMPANY, ROCHESTER, N. Y. 
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Baldwin Apples—the Old Reliable 
Baldwin. (Winter.) Without question, the leading com- 
-T mercial variety in New England, New York, 
Ontario, Ohio, Michigan and in many sections from Colorado 
to Washington. You are taking absolutely no chances when 
investing your money in this variety. Absolutely depend¬ 
able. Fruit large, firm, moderately coarse, yellow or greenish, 
blushed, mottled and striped with bright red and deep carmine. 
Prevailing effect is bright red. Tree large, very, vigorous, 
strong and hardy. Ripens in November, lasts until May. 
Spitzenburg. (Winter.) A well known variety of the 
Baldwin class; handsome red. Medium to large. Crisp, 
juicy, tender, subacid. November to February. Prices: 
Extra Size, 5 to 7 ft., XXX, 35 cents each. Orchard 
Size, 4 y 2 to 6 ft., XX, 30 cents each. Smaller Size, 4 to 
5 ft., X, 25 cents each. 
JOIN OUR GOOD TREE CAMPAIGN 
Did you ever stop to think that— 
No matter how valuable your land—no matter how much it cost 
per acre— 
No matter how much you weed, dig, hoe or cultivate — 
No matter how deep you plow, or how much you disc or 
harrow— 
No matter how much the sun shines, or how much it rains, 
how much you irrigate or water — 
No matter how ideal the weather conditions, how much you 
fertilize or manure —and every one of these things represents real 
cash money— it is all lost and wasted and the eilort is for nothing, 
if in the first place you don't have the right kind of trees. Good 
trees cost the least and are the smallest investment you put into 
any field or garden. It’s the smallest initial expense and counts 
for the most. 
Good trees are exactly like pure-bred live stock. Like begets 
like. You can’t get good crops from poor, inferior, weak trees, any 
more than you can get good live stock from poor, inferior, ill¬ 
shaped, crooked-backed, low grade, stunted live stock parents. 
When you want to head any of your herds, you always pick out 
the best. You don’t want weaklings. It is exactly the same 
with trees. 
You can’t afford to take a chance buying the cheap kind. 
Join our campaign for good trees today. All we ask of you is 
one tree order to let us prove what our trees are, and we will make 
you a life customer. 
Sweet Bough, (Summer.) This is a universal favorite 
for the ‘home orchard.” Fruit large, moderately firm, 
crisp, tender, juicy, sweet. Skin smooth, pale greenish yellow, 
sometimes blushed. Tree vigorous, long lived. Season 
August to early September. 
Fanny. (Fall.) A very good dessert apple, resembling 
the Fameuse. Skin clear; yellow mostly overlaid with bright 
red, indistinctly striped with carmine. Season September 
to November or later. 
Wolf River. (Winter.) Fruit large, firm, tender, juicy, 
subacid. Skin pale bright yellow, mottled and blushea with 
bright deep red with conspicuous splashes and broad stripes 
of bright carmine. Tree large, vigorous and hardy. Ripens 
in September, lasts until December. 
Fall Pippin —(Holland or Pound Pippin)—Very large, 
roundish-oblong; yellow, tender, rich and delicious; tree a 
good grower, and regular, abundant bearer. Ripens in 
October and lasts until December. 
Green’s Improved Baldwin. gj-WMgE 
ity than ordinary Baldwin. Tree more vigorous grower. 
Discovered by C. A. Green. 
Green’s Apple Collection No. 1 
6 Splendid 4 Vi to 6 ft. Apple Trees for $1.10 
1 Green’s Baldwin 1 Northern Spy 
1 McIntosh 1 R. I. Greening 
1 American Blush 1 Kingof Tompkins County 
Special Price $1.10 (Sold Elsewhere $3.00) 
