HAZELS FILBERT CROSSES 
Buchanan, Longfellow, Bixby, Brixnut 
HAZELS—Winkler 
PERSIMMONS 
Kawakami, Ruby,' Colby, Josephine, Mitchell 
Seedless, Penland Seedless, Hicks, Silkeyfine, 
Stout, Miller, Early Golden. 
PRICES 
Walnuts, 2 to 3 ft. 50c; 3 to 4 ft. 75c; 4 to 5 
ft. $1.00; 5 to 7 ft. $1.25. 
Hickory and Pecan Family, 2 to 3 ft. 75c; 3 to 
4 ft. $1.00; 4 to 5 ft. $1.50; 5 to 7 ft. $2.00. 
Hazel, 2 to 3 ft. 25c. 
Princess Almond, 11 j 16 up. 40c 4 to 5 ft. 
Persimmons, 2 to 3 ft. 35c; 3 to 4 ft. 50c; 4 to 
5 ft. 75c; 5 to 7 ft. $1.00. 
DIRECTIONS FOR PLANTING TREES 
Dig the holes large enough to receive the roots 
of the trees without cramping them, and above all 
see that the soil from the bottom of the hole is 
put back first just as it came out. Do not place 
fish, blessed crosses or any other superstition into 
the bottom of the hole, but just ground, then tamp 
it firmly as you are filling it. Do not mix fer¬ 
tilizers with the ground nor put any at the bottom of 
the hole. Put your fertilizer on top of the ground 
after the tree is planted so that the rains will 
carry it down to the roots instead of away 
from them. 
In case your tree is large and does not vegetate 
when it should, cut if off 3 or 4 buds above the 
union of stock and sion and it will grow nicely, in 
fact, a cutback tree will always outgrow one that 
is not cut back and bear sooner. Follow these 
directions and you will lose mighty few trees 
that reached you in healthy condition. That a 
tree must be planted as it stood in the nursery, 
with same side north, is superstition. We never 
pay any attention to this and loose very, very 
lew trees. Do not set the tree more than two 
inches deeper than it stood in the nursery. 
