FRUIT AND ORNAMENTAL NURSERY STOCK 
Henry L. Harrison Orlando Harrison George A. Harrison 
The upper boxes show last picking in our orchards of Carman, lower boxes first picking of Ray and Belle of Georgia, 
PEACHES 
The Harrison Peach trees are the best Peach trees you can plant in your orchard. Our superior Berlin 
climate and soil, plus Harrison methods of propagating, planting, budding, cultivating, spraying, pruning, 
digging, grading and packing are what make the fine trees. If we could get you to come to Berlin, we could 
show you all the details. If you cannot come and will send us your order, we will stake our reputation on 
the promise that you will get the very best trees that can be grown. 
We know what these trees are because we grow every one of them from the Peach-pit to the finished 
tree that is sent to you. We plant the seeds in rows like corn. From the time they sprout till they are put 
on board the car for shipment, they are cultivated and pruned and sprayed so that no chances for securing 
better development or for bettering them in any other way are overlooked. The real worth of our Peach 
trees is proved best by many hundreds of bearing Peach-orchards planted with trees grown at Berlin. 
Growing Peaches is particular work, but it pays large profits. The story of how one of our orchards, 
here at Berlin, produced more than $25,000.00 net profit in 1913, and a big crop in 1914, has been told, 
till you probably are familiar with it. 
There are only ten thousand trees 
in that orchard. They occupy about a 
hundred acres. If the same hundred 
acres had been in wheat, a yield of 
more than two thousand dollars’ worth 
would be considered big. The one thing 
that brought us the $25,000.00 instead 
of only $2,000, was that we planted 
Peach trees on the land, and took care 
of them, instead of keeping the farm in 
general crops. This is the big idea. 
Don’t depend for your profit on grain 
and stock. Put your land in fruit, and 
get returns worth while. 
Mrs. Wilson and I were very much 
pleased and surprised to receive day before 
yesterday a crate of the finest Elberta 
Peaches I have ever seen.—C. S. Wilson, 
Professor of Horticulture, New York State 
College of Agriculture, at Cornell Uni- 
J. G. Harrison versity, Ithaca, N. Y., Aug. 24, 1914. G. Hale Harrison 
23 
