NOBLE NURSERY, NOBLE, OKLA. 
PAGE FIVE 
APRICOTS—Co-operating with other Ok¬ 
lahoma nurserymen we have been for some¬ 
time seeking varieties of apricots and other 
tender fruits that will get by the spring 
frosts and bear oftener. We feel that some 
progress has been made and we hope later 
to be able to offer frost resistant varieties. 
We offer at present: 
Early Golden Noble 
Early Cluster ' Moorpark 
CHERRY TREES—Early Richmond, Large 
Montmorency, Montmorency English Morello. 
The Cherry is one of our best fruits in point 
of regular annual bearing. The trees are often 
attacked by bark borers. This can be prevented 
by clean cultivation and by washing the bodies 
and larger branches every 3 or 4 weeks in spring 
and summer with lye water, strength 1 can con¬ 
centrated lye to 5 gallons. This treatment will 
be found beneficial to all kinds of trees. 
GRAPES—No fruit gives quicker or surer 
results. If you make your trellis when you 
set the plants, cultivate well and get your 
vines running and climbing by the middle 
of the first summer, you can gather half to 
a full crop of grapes the second. You are 
losing time if you allow your vines to grow 
a year without trellis. 
Grape vines correctly pruned every winter keep 
renewing themselves and remain in good vigor 
and bearing after 20 to 40 years. Spraying with 
standard Bordeaux 4-4-50 when fruit is half 
grown destroys brown rot and does the vines 
a lot of good. 
Black or Purple, Campbell’s Early, Gloeta, 
Worden, Captain, Concord, Ives, R. W. Mun¬ 
son, America, Bailey, Extra, Carman, Fern 
Munson, Last Rose. 
Pink, Red and Brown—Headlight, Brigh¬ 
ton, Delaware, Catawba. 
White or Light—Diamond, Niagara, Edna, 
Goethe. 
BERRY FRUITS 
Blackberries: McDonald, Early Harvest, 
Dallas, Eldorado. 
Dewberries: Austin, Lucretia, Thornless. 
Raspberries: Kansas, Cumberland (blacks), 
Latham, Chief (reds). 
Youngberries: New, large, good, productive. 
Strawberries 
Blakemore, best, early, spring bearing. 
Aroma, best, late, spring bearing. 
Mastodon, everbearing. 
NUT TREES 
Paper Shell Pecans: Western varieties— 
generally best for this section. Halbert, Bur¬ 
kett, Western Schley. Eastern varieties— 
Stuart, Success. 
Walnuts: Thomas, Wilson Wonder. 
Thousands of nut trees planted in this section 
have died the first or second year. We have a 
plan which will enable you to raise most of 
the trees you plant. Ask for it. 
OTHER TREE FRUITS—Fig, Japan Per¬ 
simmon, Ju Jube. 
GARDEN ROOTS AND HERBS—Rhubarb, 
Asparagus, Horse Radish, Sage, Thyme. 
