
Jersey Cattle in one of our Pecan Groves. 
Pecan Trees and Cattle 
Gee Sheep and Pecans combined have proved very profitable to us. After 
the, pecan trees attain some size and start bearing, we have found that cattle 
and sheep grazing in the orchard will make enough profit to give you the pecan 
crop almost without cost. 
In our Pecan orchards we plant Giant Burr Clover, Crimson and White Dutch 
Clover, Austrian Peas, Hairy Vetch and Wild Winter Peas, with some oats for fine 
grazing in winter and spring. This greatly enriches the land and puts humus in the 
ground at the same time. Very little fertilizer is needed with such a combination, 
and you have a fast growing, heavy bearing and profitable orchard that is beau- 
tiful indeed. 
The Finest Insurance in the World 
A bac Out An Insurance Policy with Nature by planting a Pecan Grove. It will 
Start paying you the day the trees are set out. Every day for the next 50 to 100 
years your pecan trees should get larger. And as they get older and larger they bear 
more and more pecans, and cost you less and less per pound to grow. The older the 
trees get, the farther they send their roots down into the ground, feeding on soil 
untouched by the roots of other trees and plants. Rains and drouths may come and 
go, but every day and every night the pecan trees you plant will be growing in 
beauty and profit for you, if you give them the care and attention they deserve. 
Page Three 
