THE WILSON NURSERIES, WILSON, NIAGARA COUNTY, NEW YORK 
13 
CHERRIE 
PRICES OF ALL VARIETIES OF 
SWEET CHERRIES 
Each 10 
First Class, large size, 2 year, No. 1 
Grade, 5 to 7 ft., 3/4 up. 65c $6.00 
First Class, medium size, 2 year, 
4 to 5 ft., 5/8 to 3/4... 50c 4.50 
Five or more at 10 rates. 
Sweet Cherries 
Heart and Bigarreau 
Bing. One of the most delicious sweet cherries. 
Fruit is large, black, and of very fine quality. 
Black Tartarian. Very large, bright purplish 
black; half tender, juicy, very rich, excellent flavor; 
productive. Free. First or middle of July. 
Governor Wood. Large, yellow marbled with 
light red. Sweet and rich. Productive. June. 
Lambert. Very large, purplish red. Firm and 
rich. Very productive. Late July. 
Napoleon (Royal Ann). Large, pale yellow with 
bright red cheek. July. 
Schmidt’s Biggareau. Very large, deep ma¬ 
hogany color. Very juicy. July. 
Windsor. Large, very dark red, firm and rich. 
July. 
Yellow Spanish. Pale yellow with bright red 
cheek. Productive. June. 
MONTMORENCY 
PRICES OF ALL VARIETIES OF 
SOUR CHERRIES 
Each 10 100 
First Cl ass, large size, 2 year, 
No. 1 Grade, 5 to 6 ft.. 60c $5.50 $50.00 
First Class, medium size, 2 
year, 4 to 5 ft. 50c 4.50 40.00 
Twenty or more at 100 rates. 
Dwarf Fruit Trees 
Large Fruit—Small Space—Hear Young 
Easily Picked 
Sour Cherries 
75c each; 3 for $2.00; 10 for $5.00 
Early Richmond. Medium size; dark red; melt¬ 
ing, juicy, sprightly, acid flavor. This is unsur¬ 
passed for cooking purposes, and is exceedingly pro¬ 
ductive. Free. June. 
English Morello. Medium to large; blackish red; 
rich, acid, juicy and good; very productive. August. 
Montmorency. A large red, acid cherry, larger 
than Early Richmond and fully ten days later. 
Very profitable. Last of June. The leading com¬ 
mercial variety, and the best canning Cherry. 
Nut Trees 
Black W alnut. Grows from 40 to 60 feet high. 
Large crops of nuts with rough hard shell containing 
rich, oily kernels of fine flavor. Trees 4 to 5 ft. 
high, $1.00 each. 
Butternut. Large longish nuts with sweet, oily, 
nutritious kernels. Trees 4 to 5 ft., $1.00 each. 
English Walnut. A fine lofty growing tree, pro¬ 
ducing large crops of thin shelled delicious nuts. 
Trees 3 to 4 ft. high, $1.00 each. 
Dwarf F ruit frees are very desirable where space 
is limited. Can be planted about 6 or 8 ft. apart 
and will bear 4 to 6 bushels per tree. With care 
they will commence to bear the second year. The 
trees never grow over 8 ft. high. 
S—Summer 
Baldwin—W 
Delicious—W 
Gravenstein—A 
McIntosh—W 
A —Autumn W —Winter 
Red Astrachan—S 
R. I. Greening—W 
Staymans Winesap—W 
Yellow Transparent—S 
Pear 
Bartlett Duchess d’Angouleme 
Beurre d’Anjou Seckel 
Clapps Favorite 
“PLANT A TREE, JOCK, IT’LL BE GROWING W HILE YE’RE SLEEPIN”—Bobbie Burns. 
