ORNAMENTAL FRUITS 
Edible Fruits Which Lend a Striking Beauty to the Landscape 
and are a Distinct Satisfaction to the Palate 
Bush Cherries 
Rocky Mt. Cherry —A small bush Cherry with 
branches a mass of cherry like fruits % In. or 
more In diameter, excellent for Jams and Jellies. 
A perfect fertiliser for the Oka Cherry. Price, 25e 
each postpaid. Heavy 3 ft. plants. 40c each by ex* 
press. 
Buffalo Berries -Scarlet red fruits, agreeable flavor, excellent for sauce er 
jelly. 35o each, 3 for 90c postpaid. 
Gentlemen: July 6 1938 
I am interested in Buffalo Berries. Don’t know whether you know it or 
not but they make the finest Jelly in the world.—Arthur Sinnock, N. J. 
Block How— A clean looking round headed shrub. Attractive 
/ pure white May flowers give place to bunches of pink frulta 
turning to bloomy black—edible. Deep green foliage turning 
to s.carlet wine red in fall. The Black Haw is an aristocrat 
among the native shrubs of your boyhood days and now 
considered an excellent medium large shrub for general land¬ 
scape planting. Price, strong 18 in. plants 50c each: 3 for 
91.25 postpaid. 
Ornamental Truits are valuable because they produce not 
only edible fruits but are most attractive to birds. 
These fruit trees and shrubs will furnish the desired land¬ 
scape effect just as well as other ornamentals. 
Dwarf Oka Cherry 
Dwarf Oko Cherry —A mass of white blossoms In the spring 
time followed by an abundance of large plum like fruits, red to 
the seed. The trees we send out should bear some fnilt the 
following year. A most ornamental small tree for the lawn. For 
poUenlzation plant In close proximity to a Rocky Mt. Cherry. 
Pries 4-5 ft. trees 75c each by express. 
Nonking Cherry (Prunus Tomentosa) Something entirely 
new. A very ornamental spreading shrub or low growing tree 
(can be kept in either form), covered In early spring before 
the leaves appear with masses of bloom. Pink in bud, the tiny 
flowers open a pure white and the contrast between white 
petals and bright red calyx Is very noticeable. The short¬ 
stemmed cherry-like fruit, a rich scarlet, ripens in June and is 
both good to eat and very decorative. It makes a beautiful 
shrub to plant where an early blooming large shrub Is desired and it pro¬ 
duces In abundance a crop of delicious fruit good to eat from the hand, 
that makes beautiful rich red Jellies and Jams, and a good wine. Plant 
several plants for proper poUenlzation. Price, 35c each, 3 for $1.00. 
Heavy 3 ft. plants, 50c each by express. 
Cherry Eleognus (Goumi) a most attractive medium size shrub, fruitful 
and ornamental, leaves silvery beneath and twigs covered with brownish 
pubescence. Clusters of red fruits desirable eaten raw or in Jam. The 
Goumi is a valuable shrub for landscaping 
in addition to Its abundance of unusual 
fruits. Price, 2 ft. plants 50c each by 
express. 
Bright Red Berries of the 
Cherry Eleagnus(Goumi) 
Am. Cranberrybush 
We are offering three selections of larg< 
I * suited heavy yielding and highly desirabh 
types selec^ by the U. S. Dept, of Agriculture for theh 
specially fine fruit characters. They bear large, showj 
masses of ^hlte flowers in June followed by clusters of large 
brilliant red fruit In late summer and fall. The fruit is ven 
high in pectin, of a brilliant red color, and is used chlefli 
for making Jelly eaten with meats. Highly ornamental an<! 
attractive. 
WENTWORTH 
Earliest, ready to be used for 
lelly early In August; bush large, 
spreading, productive, clusters 
fsrsTP. drooping; berries large. 
UAUC Midseason; bushes 
vigorous, erect, very 
productive of attractive red ber¬ 
ries; ripens In latter part of Au¬ 
gust and in September. 
Price, American Cranberrybush—Strong 2 yr. 18 Inch Plants, «0c 
20 
ANDREWS 
foliage dark green, clusters large, 
held erect by stiff stems; berries 
very large, very high In pectin j 
ripens in September. 
each, 3 for 91.25 postpaid. 
