



FRUIT TREES 
ALL FRUIT TREES, WHILE THEY LAST 
$1.50 each; 3 for $4.00; 6 for $7.50; 12 for $13.50; 100 for $75.00 
“ANOKA”? APPLE—SEM!I-DWARF—Best for the Home Garden 
Bears Fruit the First or Second Year after Planting. 
Bears large crops of delicious apples EVERY YEAR. 
An excellent Summer Eating Apple and a superb cooker. 
Disease resistant and hardy even in the coldest northern states and up into Canada. 
No other apple can combine the wonderful flavor, early bearing, end great productiveness 
of the Anoka Apple. The fruit is of good size and beautifully striped red. There is no other 
apple like Anoka. It is a mew apple and the result of many years of hard work and thou- 
sands of crosses. It was the one selected as the culmination of all these efforts, as combining 
all of the best points of hardiness, early bearing, productiveness, and superb flavor, Being 
of medium dwarf habit it is the best apple for the small garden. The size, color, and flavor 
of Anoka Apple are sure to make it a great favorite, In addition to its abundant crop of 
delicious fruit, nothing excels it in beauty when it is loaded down with blossoms in the 
Springtime. It’s an investment, not an expense, as every tree will pay for itself several 
times over each year in delicious fruit. Husky trees, ready to bear—$1.50 each; 3 for 
$3.75; 6 for $6.00; 12 for $10.09. , 
“RED DELICIOUS’? APPLE—The Red Delicious Apple is so well-known that it is 
hardly necessary to say anything about it. It is the one fancy apple that outsells all others 
on the high class fruit stands. Color red, fruit sweet, juicy, and delicious. Handsome spring 
blossoms. Hardy and very productive at an early age. Strong 4 to 5 foot, 5 year old trees. 
“GRIMES GOLDEN’’ APPLE—FExcellent yellow apple of large size, crisp and juicy and 
mild sub-acid flavor. Handsome spring blossoms. Hardy anywhere. Strong 4 to 5 foot, 5 
year old trees. 
“STAYMAN’S WINESAP”’ APPLE—The favorite winter apple, with handsome firm 
fruit of the most delicious flavor, slightly tart and full of juice. Excellent eating or cooking 
apple. Handsome spring blossoms. Hardy anywhere. Strong 4 to 5 foot, 5 year old trees. 
MULBERR Y—The Mulberry is one of our most attractive trees. It produces great quati- 
ties of delicious berries, much like a coreless, seedless blackberry. Aside from producing a 
delightful shade tree and providing great quantities of berries for the table, they will bring 
many attractive birds to your garden as the fruit is a favorite ‘‘tidbit”’ of all sorts of birds. 
I have a limited supply of nice sturdy, 4 to 5 ft. trees. 
NUT TREES © 
: ALL NUT TREES, WHILE THEY LAST 
$1.50 each; 3 for $4.00; 6 for $7.50; 12 for $13.50; 100 for $75.00 
WALNUT TREES—$250,000 for 80 acres of Walnut Timber. Very few people realize 
the timber vlaue of walnut trees, yet during the last World War a farmer in Iowa sold his 
80 acres of Walnut Timber from trees planted 40 feet apart for TWO HUNDRED AND 
FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS. He had meantime been making a living from them 
selling the nuts by the carload in the Chicago market. Even during peace times, as high as 
$450.00 has been paid for a single tree. | have for many years been advocating the planting 
of spare land in Walnut trees for future profit. Once planted they require little or no care. 
For the home garden there is no finer looking or more useful shade tree. It is therefore a 
three purpose tree; while it is developing into a beautiful shade tree.and producing luscious 
nuts, it is also increasing in timber value from year to year. The timber is used for gun 
stocks and furniture and therefore demands a high price during war times; and it is also 
scarce enough to demand a high price during peace times. So whether you wish one or more 
-shade trees for the home garden, or have some spare land somewhere and have an eye 
to the future, I again recommend “PLANT WALNUT TREES.” FINE 4 to 5 foot 
sturdy, 5 year old trees. 
BLIGHT RESISTANT CHESNUTS—When I first came to Long Island 35 yearsagoit 
abounded with huge stately Chestnut trees, nature’s most magnificent shade trees. Then 
the blight came, one of the many foreign pest importations, and asa result every last chestnut 
tree was wiped out, not only on Long Island, but throughout the entire country. The 
United States Deparment of Agriculture thereupon began a very thorough research to 
determine what might be done about it. The result was the discovery in China of a blight- 
resistant Chestnut Tree, producing nuts of exceptionally fine flavor. [“am™ pleased to be 
able to offer this year some of these blight-resistant Chestnut Trees, four years old. 
BUTTERNUT TREES—A tree of the walnut family with elongated nuts that have a de- 
licious sweet kernel. They are also often pickled when young. The hardwood is valuable and 
is used for interior trim. The tree is highly ornamental and interesting. 
SHADE and ORNAMENTAL TREES 
WHILE THEY LAST, $1.50 each; 3 for $4.00; 6 for $7.50; 12 for $13.50; 100 for $75.00 
WHITE BIRCH— Winter or summer, the snow white bark of the Canoe Birch is a delight 
in any garden or landscape. For best effect they should be planted in groups of several 
trees a few feet apart, the number depending upon the space available. | have some fine, 
young trees available while they last. 
KENTUCKY COFFEE TREE—A specimen that is now 40 ft. high planted by me as a 
tiny tree 20 years ago, is the pride of my home garden. I have never known anyone who 
has seen it who was not fascinated by it. A full grown tree grows 100 feet high. The foliage 
is as artistic as the finest fern. It belongs to the Pea family, producing greenish white flowers 
in large clusters at the end of the branches, followed by heavy pods like lima beans, inclosing 
mahogany colored beans that take polish like a bead. Fine, shapely 5 year old trees. 
GOLDEN RAIN—One of our most beautiful and least known shade trees, loaded with 
panicles of flowers like Wisterias, onlyin bright yellow. Ornamental, hardy, little known. 
Strong 4 to 5 ft. trees while they last. 
WHITE FLOWERING DOGWOOD — Magnificent early spring flowering trees covered 
with white blossoms. They are also the most handsome of all the fall foliage trees, the 
foliage being the first to turn a bright red. Fine for sun or shade. Strong 4 to 5 ft. trees. 
RED FLOWERING DOGWOOD-—Same as above, but with red flowers. The dogwood 
trees do not grow large and are therefore especially adaptable to the small garden. The Red 
Flowering Dogwood is one of our most beautiful flowering trees. Strong 4 to 5 ft. trees. 
Worth double the price asked for them. While they last. 
WHITE FLOWERING BUCKEYE—A fine shade or street tree covered with attractive 
white flowers, each cluster of flowers being a full bouquet. The flowers turn into the shiny 
polished Buckeye, carried by many as “‘lucky-pocket-pieces.”’ Strong 4 to 5 ft. trees, 
RED FLOWERING BUCKEYE—Same as aboye, but with brilliant red flowers. These 
flower very young and the 3 to 4 ft. trees I am offering have already begun to blossom. 
They do not make as large a tree as the white flowering variety and are therefore more 
useful where a smaller tree is required for the home garden. 
BLOOD LEAF DWARF ORNAMENTAL MAPLES—Very ornamental dwarf growing 
trees, ideal as specimens for the small home garden. Blood-red foliage all year. Fine 2 to 3 
ft. trees, while they last. 
CRABAPPLES 
One of our most beautiful early spring flowering trees. Blossoms highly fragrant. 
$1.50 each; 3 for $4.00; 6 for $7.50; 12 for $13.50; 100 for $75.00 
e In the Following Varieties 
BECHTEL’S DOUBLE FLOWERING CRAB—Best of all the flowering crabs. Large 
double luscious pink flowers, much like a pink rose. Strong 4 to 5 ft. trees. 
FLORIBUNDA—Bright pink buds, white flowers, yellow fruit. Robust 5 to 6 ft. trees. 
NIEDSWETZK YANA—Red flowers, red branches, red leaves, red fruit. Fine 5 to 6 ft. 
' trees. 
RED FLESH CRAB—Brilliant red flowers, red bark and red foliage tinselled silver under- 
neath. Finest fruit of all. Strong 5 to 6 ft. trees. 
SIBERIAN FLOWERING CRAB—Large pink and white fragrant blossoms, followed by 
bright red and yellow fruit. Like all crabapples these are fine for jelly, or for pickling, or 
making cider, or for flavoring other jams or jellies. Very hardy in most severe climates. 
A's 
\ 
* i dame 3 ual 

A Full Grown Apple Tree in All Its Spring Glory. 
A Full Grown Tree Will Produce Several 
Barrels of Apples Each Year. 


Walnut Tree 
and Nut 

¢ 
