THE NEW BERRY 
GIANT HIMALAYA 
A briary vine like a blackberry, which grows forty feet a 
year unless trimmed. New growth starts from ends of last 
year’s branches and tips. Berries are borne on old and new 
wood alike. A hundred thousand vines came through our 
severe Michigan winter without an inch of deadwood and 
without the slightest winter killing. The berries are black, 
roundish, an inch long, as good as strawberries—flesh solid 
all the way through. They are so firm that they .may be 
shipped and re-shipped. One man sold $30.00 worth from 
two plants in their second year. We get ten tons an acre 
from three-year-old plants, and sell them all quick at six¬ 
teen cents a quart. We are growers—and the original intro¬ 
ducers in the East. Himalaya plants grow best when plant¬ 
ed after the soil is warm. They can be successfully planted 
as late as July 15th. 
A BERRY FOR EVERY PURPOSE 
Himalaya is a perennial just the same as an apple, bearing on the old 
fruit-spurs extremely juicy, luscious berries. They are delicious when 
served uncooked for desert, and may be used for almost every purpose for 
which berries are adapted. Three times as much jam or jelly may be 
made from Himalaya than with ordinary blackberries. Last year we sent 
Giant Himalaya Berry plants to over fourteen hundred different people, 
and everyone was satisfied. 
I have seen the Giant Himalaya Berry growing and fruiting at the 
Berrydale Experiment Gardens, and consider it the best cropping black¬ 
berry I know of. I noticed branches on which there were from fifty to a 
hundred berries. These were jet black, and the size of a Lawton berry. 
Its blossoms come late, and crops are suie. It will stand more frost than 
any berry we have ever had here. I shall plant two and a half acres of 
Himalaya next spring. C. Kraus, Holland, Mich., Oct., 1910 . 
The Himalaya berry plants received in the very best shape. 
_ C. B. Billings, Montana. 
Eighteen months old plants that will fruit this summer. One dollar 
each, prepaid. Get A Berrydale Berry Book 
Berrydale Berry Book is an unusual catalogue. It goes out of beat¬ 
en tracks, tells about several dozen good berries, and is sent free. A copy 
will help you to lower the high cost of of living, and to have better health. 
Ask for one without fail. 
No more Rooted Tips Himalaya Berry for sale this spring—all sold. 
Orders booked now for fall delivery, Strong Rooted Tips Himalaya. 
Garden Ave. 
HOLLAND, MICH 
Berrydale Experiment Gardens 
L 
iU 
WILLOWDALE 
NURSERIES 
We have the following varieties of 
peaches in surplus, all fine, first-class 
stock: 
I 
ELBERTA 
CARMAN 
BELLE OF GA. 
RED CHEEK 
FOSTER 
STUMP 
EA. RIVERS 
EA. YORK 
OLD MIXON 
SALWAY 
REEVES FAVORITE 
NIAGARA 
CHAIRS CHOICE 
MT. ROSE 
CRAWFORD’S LATE 
TROTH’S EARLY 
STEPHEN’S RARERIPE GREENSBORO 
Write us for special prices on Sour Cherries, Champion 
Quince, English Walnuts, Japan Walnuts, Japan Plums, Bart¬ 
lett and Keiffer Pears, York Imperial Apples. Yours truly. 
The 
Co. 
Rakestraw=Pyle 
Kennett Square, Pa. 
Ik 
THE MORRIS NURSERY CO. 
WEST CHESTER, PA. 
We can offer of fine imported plants, balled and 
burlapped, the following select list, which we offer at 
very reasonable prices, before they are planted in the 
nursery. 
Abies Douglassi, 3 ft. 
“ glauca Douglassi elegans, 2 ft. 
“ concolor, 2 to 2 ft. 
•• 3 ft. 
“ Nordmanniana, 3 ft. 
Cupressus Allumi, 2 to 3 ft. 
Cedrus Atlantica glauca, 3 ft. 
Cryptomeria Japonica Lobbi, 3 ft. 
Juniperus Pfitzeriana, 214 ft. 
“ Sabina, 2 tt. 
“ tamaricifolia, 2 ft. 
“ virginiana glauca, 18 to 24 
in. 
Picea pungens glauca com pacta, 
Koster, 3 ft. 
Picea pungens glauca pendula, 3/4 
to 4 ft. 
Picea orientalis, 3 ft. 
“ polita, 2 to 3 ft. 
Pinus excelsa, 3 K to 4 ft. 
“ cembra, 2 to 2/4 ft 
Retinispora obtusa, 3 tt. 
“ “ nana aurea, 2 to 
2 % ft. 
Retinispora filifera, 3 ft. 
" " aurea, 20 in. 
“ aura Crippsi, 12 to 18 in. 
Sciadotypus verticillata, 3 ft. 
Thuya Ellwanger aurea, 18 in 
Tsuga Sargenti pendula, 2 ft. 
Tree Box, Pyramidal, 2 tt. 
“ “ “ 3 ft. 
“ “ tree form, 2 tt. stems, 16 
in. head. 
Rhododendrons, hardy kinds, 18 in. 
“ " “ 2 ft. 
Andromeda floribunda, strong plants 
“ japonica, “ *' 
Mahonia aquifolia, strong plants 
Daphne mezereum, red and white, 
strong. 
Daphne cneorum, strong plants. 
Azalea amoena, 15 to 18 in. 
“ pontica, red, white, pink. 
Cyclopedia of American Horticulture 
L. H. Bailey 
IN FOUR VOLUMES 
The NATIONAL NURSERYMAN has made special 
arrangements with the publishers of this great work and 
now offers it to Nurserymen on special easy monthly 
terms, $2.00 per month for ten months. The work 
shipped by express prepaid on receipt of first install¬ 
ment and coupon below filled out. 
Practical instructions on every subject connected with 
Horticulture. Four handsome quarto volumes; 
2,800 original engravings, 50 full plates: 2,016 pages and 
4,357 articles; Total plants accounted for 24,434. 
Fill out this coupon and mail with first pajrment: 
SPECIAL ORDER BLANK. 
Date . 
National Nurseryman, 
Rochester, N. Y. 
Please enter my name as a subscriber for the new CYCLOPEDIA OF 
AMERICAN HORTICULTURE to be sent to me, charges prepaid, complete 
in four illustrated volumes, bound in green cloth. I inclose $2 and agree to 
pay $2 monthly for nine months after delivery until S20 is paid. 
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I31 
