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Courtesy Mrs. H. M. Van De Voorde 
DWARF PEAR TREES, planted Spring 1941, photograph taken Spring 1942. 
Mrs. H. M. Van De Voorde, Schenectady, N. Y., wrote us on June 20, 1942: 
“I am enclosing pictures of the Dwarf Pear Trees you sent us last year, 
and they now have dozens of perfect little pears on them. We are certainly 
delighted with them.” 
This report came from Dr. Edmund H. Zabriskie, Old Greenwich, Conn., on Se einice 
28, 1942: 
“I am enclosing two photographs of your Dwarf Apple Trees which were 
planted a year ago. You may find it interesting to know that they were 
; covered with delicious, oversized apples, in average soil adjacent to the 
seashore.” 
We ourselves are amazed again and again to see the Dwarf Fruit Trees on the trial 
grounds of the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station at Geneva almost 
breaking down under their load of fruit, just a few years after planting. No wonder 
that more and more home gardeners want to plant some of their own. 
DWARF FRUIT TREE COLLECTION (Group No. 1) 
4 Dwarf Fruit Trees, 3 year, 4 to 5 ft. 
2 Apples (Red Gravenstein, Yellow Delicious) 
2 Pears (Tongern, Flemish Beauty) 
Total 4 Trees for only $8.00. . 



