FRUITS 
for 
THE HOME 
GARDEN 
A few fruit trees will be wel- 
come on your grounds the year 
round. First of all, you plant 
them for their fruit, of course, and 
in these food-rationed days any- 
thing you can grow for the family 
larder is so much to the good. But your 
fruit trees will also give you springtime 
bloom and summer shade—a real in- 
vestment in pleasure and profit. 
Apple Trees 
2-yr.-old, $2.00 each 
WINTER VARIETIES 
Delicious _ York Imperial 
Stayman (Improved Winesap). 
AUTUMN VARIETIES 
Grimes Golden. Good size; yellow. 
SUMMER VARIETIES 
Early Harvest. Medium. Pale yellow. 
Yellow Transparent. Earliest. White skin. 







EARLY RICHMOND CHERRIES 
Pear Trees 
2-yr.-old, $2.50 each 
Bartlett. The best, large eating Pear. 
Seckel. Small, sweet. Very popular. 
Cherry Trees 
2-yr.-old, $2.50 each 
Early Richmond. Sour, light red fruit. 
Montmorency. Sour variety. 
Napoleon. Large; sweet. Midseason. 
Tartarian. Large, sweet, black Cherries. 
Peach Trees 
2-yr.-old $2.00 each 
Belle of Georgia. Large; white flesh. 
Carman. White flesh. Semi-clingstone. 
Elberta. Large; yellow flesh. Freestone. 
Plum Trees 
2-yr.-old, $2.50 each 
Abundance. The popular early cherry-red. 
Burbank. A well-known dark red, early. 
Damson (Blue Shropshire). 
Grape-Vines 
2-yr.-old, postpaid 
Caco. Large wine-red berries. 75c. each. 
Concord. The standard black. 
Lucile. Light red wine Grape. 
Miooore’s Early. Large; black. Niagara. White. 
All Grape-Vines, except where noted, 60c. each; 
$3.00 for 6. 
STAYMAN APPLES 
ae | 
F. W. BOLGIANO & CO., WASHINGTON, D. C. 
