FRUITS and BERRIES 
Happily, fruit has returned to the garden. For fruit, like 
vegetables, make a manor of even the smallest place. To pluck 
grapes, blackberries or apples fresh from vine, bush or tree that 
you yourself have raised brings a feeling of self-sutficiency—a 
distinct sense of well being. 
Fruits in your garden also command on ornamental value. 
Few things are as decorative as an appletree, time-worn and mel- 
low, growing at the end of a path or casting necessary shade on a 
bed of mint. Soft blooms on cherries, apples, pears and plum are 
welcomed with the spring. 
In addition to the sizes listed below we can supply large, bear- 
ing trees for immediate yield and effect. 
APPLE—Ten Varieties all hardy and adapted to the Chicago area. 
CRABAPPLE— Dolgo, Whitney. 
PEAR—Bartlett and Flemish beauty. 
PLUM—Abundance, Underwood, Burbank, Wisconsin Prune. 
Toka, Ember. 
CHERRY—Montmorency, Early Richmond, English Morello. 
All FRUIT TREES priced as follows: 
Leanchsstem-. 7-6 oft high f: ee ee ee Caches 
l¥- 1terinch “*stem:.)-6. fts highs ae eee each= 12485 
13672 sinch® stent 267: ft biggie sees) ee eee each 2.50 
2° 272"inch stem? 7-9-6 ial siete ee eee each 3.50 
22923" inch s6tem 17-9 44, high aa ee ee ee each 4.50 
Larger trees priced at nursery. 
PEACH, 
7 We now offer a Peach tree that should survive our climate for 
it grows in northern Michigan, 
Marguettes>7/16-sinch stems ee ee eee each 1.00 
Poll ver dat(Al6-ainche stem jee en eee ee each 2.1025 
' each per 10 
BLACKBERRY—Eldorado. ....2....22 10 .80 
CURRANT Cherry joc, > ase eee 20 1.50 
GOOSEBERRY— Downing (2.22 eee as 2.00 
RASPBERRY—Cumberland and Latham _..___. 10 .80 
GRAPES 
Concord. Delaware and Niagra ................... 15 
RHUBARB : mig! 
VICCOME sn pear eee he cer eh ee 12 
STR/AAWBERRIES st 
Mastadon everbearing) ) 1.240. fae 1.0 
ASPARAGUS Sc ey 
Martha’, Washington. aie ree oe ee per 100 1.50 
