PEACHES 
Elberta — SEPTEMBER 1. PLANTED BY THOUSANDS. 
Standard commercial peach. Plant Elberta and be sure of a crop. 
Large to extra larger. Freestone. Golden/ .yellow fieish, red at the pit, 
firm, juicy. Ha® no equal as a, prolific bearer and shipper. Best 
known peach. 
J. H. Hale- "LATE AUGUST. FIRST IN SIZE. COLOR 
Quality. Yellow, thick skin., colors to a rosy tint. Deep yellow, fine 
grained very firm flesh—delicious flavor. A beautiful peach, fresh or 
canned. In size, color and quality, no peach compares with Hale. 
Always brings $1.00 to $1.50 more per bushel. 
South Haven -AUGUST. THE PROFITABLE EARLY 
Peach. Originated in the' famous Michigan Peach Belt, South Haven, 
has proven, one of the best varieties in every peach growing section. 
Experiment IStations recommend it when an earlier peach than El¬ 
berta is desired. Withstands severe winter cold. As fine a peach as 
the' standard Elberta, firm, highly colored—and ripens 12 to 18 days 
earlier. 
Champion -- EARLY AUGUST. BEST WHITE FREE- 
stone. Many prefer this white peach. Full of rich juice, finest flavor. 
Large red cheek. Heavy burner; very hardy. 
HALE HAVEN 
PEACH 
The Famous HALE HAVEN 
MID-AUGUST. Wonderful new peach with great 
size and beautiful color of J. H. Hale and earliness 
of South Haven. A better peach of richest flavor; 
yellow flesh firm and juicy. Better shipper than 
South Haven; always freestone; bears every year. 
Hale Haven is one of the best and its sale shows 
a far greater increase than any other kind. Al¬ 
ways brings more money. Ripens 10 to 15 days be¬ 
fore Elberta and is second only to that grand 
variety in popularity and profits. 
New HARDEE 
(See Illustration on Back Cover) 
U. S. Plant Patent No. 120 
THE HARDIEST PEACH—PRODUCES FULL 
CROP AFTER 18 Degrees BELOW ZERO 
'This record is reported by Ohio Experiment Sta¬ 
tion. It means sure crops when even Elberta fails, 
and that means soaring peach prices. HARDEE is 
a drought-resisting, steady bearing, sure-cropping 
tree. Fruit is a delicious, high quality, yellow free¬ 
stone. Ripens with Elberta; is more elongated, 
rich yellow with red cheek. Shipping, keeping and 
home use qualities are excellent. Successful peach 
crops can now be grown in many sections that 
were too cold before. Plaint HARDEE, the cold re¬ 
sisting peach, and safeguard your future crops. 
PRICES: 7-16 trees Each, 55c; 10 for $4.50; 30 for 
$10.50. (Net, No Discount.) 
Order Your HARDEE Trees Now! 
SOUR CHERRIES 
EARLY RICHMOND—One of the most popular sour 
cherries, unexcelled for cooking. Dark red, tart, and 
juicy. Hardy trees uninjured by cold. Big crops. 
MONTMORENCY — Ripens late in June and is best 
sour cherry for market. Makes delicious pies; fine 
for canning. Fruit larger than Richmond; bright red, 
acid flavor. 
Grow Montmorency for the Canning Factory Market 
SWEET CHERRIES 
BLACK TARTARIAN—Extensively planted and pro¬ 
lific. Regular bearer of big, black juicy, sweet fruit. 
Hardy, vigorous. Best and most profitable black sweet 
cherry—for .market and home. 
NAPOLEON-YELLOW—Old-time favorite, succeeds 
practically everywhere. Heavy bearer of large light 
yellow heart-shaped fruit. 
SCHMIDT’S BIGARREAU—Newer sort. Unusually 
hardy. One of the best late sorts, especially in North¬ 
ern sections. Largest size, firm fruit; deep red to 
mahogany. Brings best prices. 
WINDSOR—Liver colored large cherry, wonderful 
flavor. Originated at Windsor, Canada.. Hardy prolific 
tree. Valuable' for market or family use. 
LARGE 
MONTMORENCY 
now! 
DWARF 
TREES 
At Reasonable Prices 
Dwarf apple and pear trees are highly prized for 
the small garden where space is limited. They 
make plenty of fruit possible as these sturdy: little 
trees bear a big crop way out of proportion to 
their size. Dwarf trees are well suited for orna¬ 
mental planting too, and their fine, fresh fruit is 
always a pleasure. 
Full Size Fruit from Dwarf 
Size Trees 
These apple and pear varieties cannot be beaten 
for a home use planting: 
Pound Sweet Apple for late summer. 
McIntosh Apple for early fall. 
Yellow Delicious Apple—late fall—early winter. 
Douglas Pear—Often bears the 2nd year after 
planting. 
Bartlett Pear—'Favorite summer eating pear. 
iSeckel Pear—Early fall sugar pear. 
Well branched, well rooted, 2-year trees ready to 
make quick growth and good crops of full size 
fruit. Plant about 10 feet apart. 
Low Prices on Opposite Page 
Page 22 
New Bristol Black Raspberry is Early, Productive and Fine Flavored—Page 12 
