~« 
~ Plant Nut Trees for Ed 
~ CHINESE CHESTNUT 
Now You Can Grow Chestnuts! 
Blight-Resistant Chestnut Trees 
Only two years from this fall, 
right in your own grounds, you can 
pick big, fat, tasty Chestnuts from 
the trees you plant _this year! Re- 
member gathering Chestnuts in the 
good old days—haven’t you felt 
sorry for your children because they 
couldn’t? The devastating blight 
that stripped our forests of the 
native Chestnut was an American 
_ tragedy! Now these hardy, blight- 
resistant Chestnut trees will bring 
them back. More than that, you 
need not wait 15 to 20 years for 
nuts—they’ll bear year after next! 
~ Plant’ in abundance’ Harrisons’ 
-strain of Chinese Chestnut Trees. 
2 to 3 ft., $2.50 each. 


PAPER-SHELL PECANS 
PAPER SHELL PECAN. Medium to large 
’ nuts; oblong thin shell; rich flavor. Good 




es 
ENGLISH WAL- 
NUT (Juglans 
regia). Thin 
shelled, large, 
delicious nuts, 
producing heavy 
crops and de- 
manding good 
prices. Most 
popular Walnut 
grown. 2 to 3 
ft., $2.50 each. 
yy 
’ grower, The best type Pecan grown. 2 to. AMERICAN PERSIM- 
3 ft., $2.00 each. 
BLACK WALNUT 
BLACK WALNUT (Juglans nigra). Rapid 
grower, spreading branches, large, deli- 
‘cious nuts, prolific bearer. 2 to 3 ft., 
: $1.50. 

Nut Trees cre a Lifetime Investment - Buy the hest 
MON. Small trees 
highly ornamental and 
producing an  abun- 
dance of pleasingly as- 
tringent spicy fruits, 
highly prized when 
gathered after the 

frosts 29 <0 <5 ats: 
$2.00. 
AMERICAN 
The old 
family favor- 
ite. Small, 
attractive 
bush, yield- 
ing abun- 
dant crops of 
tasty round 
nuts. Bears 
very young. 
1% to 2 ft., 
$1.50 each. 
[43] 
ible Foods and Landscaping 
CHINESE 
CHESTNUTS 





































