PECAN TREES 
Pecans, five pounds and up. Improved Walnuts, three pounds and up. 
Write for price of 50 to 100 lbs. Pecans wholesale—in 5 and/or 10-lb. cloth sacks, ready for Christmas 
gifts or resale. These are the finest Pecans grown, fresh from our grove. 
WESTERN PECANS 
There is a big difference in Pecans for the East and West. Let us help select proper varieties for your locations, 
for home or commercial use. Improper varieties are costly. 
BURKETT. Large, round, thin-shell nut. Rich, fine tasting and the best seller. Cracks out whole. Beautifully 
shaped shade and fast growing tree. A fair to good bearer, but taste, richness and ease of sale makes it our favorite. 
Western, but grows in many places in the East. Fills well and runs 60 per cent meat with fine plump kernels. 
WESTERN SCHLEY. Like Eastern Schley, but heavier bearer. Healthy, fine tree for the West. Nicely shaped long 
nut. Cracks well, tastes well and sells well. 
TEXAS PROLIFIC. Nice long nut, heavy and early bearer. Rich, thin-shell and cracks fine. 
HALBERT. Earlier and heaviest bearer I know. Ripens early; often bears second year after transplanting—some- 
times first year. Fills completely. Nuts medium to small, but very thin-shelled and big per cent meat. Grows in hilly 
soil. Trees head low and are fine for extreme West. Makes fair crops even in dry years. Good for black waxy land, 
but never in bottom land or in the East. 
EASTERN PECANS 
SUCCESS. Large nuts, plump, rich meated. Shell fairly thin and cracks out nicely. Pretty trees, nice bearers. 
Eastern nut but grows in many locations in the West. 
MOORE. Small, golden meated, very thin and cracks fine. Rich, plump, fills well, good taste, with big commer- 
cial future. Pretty trees, heavy bearers. A favorite. 
CHESNUT. Largest pecan we know, thin-shelled and rich. Trees grow tall, straight, fast and beautifully. Early 
bearers, often bearing first and second years after transplanting, and nuts crack out whole. Many nuts do not fill 
well, but they are fine when they do. Set where there is plenty of moisture, but well drained. 
DELMAS. Good bearer, good taste, thin-shell. East and Central Texas. Too late for North Texas. 
Mrs. Royall’s Record: “Of five 
of our 5-6 foot trees set on the 
curb March, 1938, two bore the 
first year—one making 31 nuts, 
Set commercial Pecans 50 to 
75 feet. For the home, 30 
feet apart and up. Fifty-foot 
trees run 17 to the acre. another 3. These trees grew 12 
Well bred Improved Pecans 
bear early—many times sec- 
ond year after transplanting. 
to 15 in. first year, second year 
they grew 15 to 24 in. each and 
bore again.” 

Bearing 48 nuts second year after setting. 
Tell us how many trees you want, type of soil—if upland or lowland, whether growing for commercial 
sale in the shell or to be shelled, or for home use, and we can help you select proper varieties. We sell 
nuts from our own grove, so we know your side of the business. All stock State inspected and free 
from disease. 
COOKSEY’S CORSICANA WALNUT NURSERY 
Robert M. Cooksey, Owner Telephone 1326 
Corsicana, Texas 
