HEDGE FILBERT (a hybrid). Grows 12 feet. Produces large quantities of good eating nuts. Makes an excellent 
screen hedge, windbreak or clump planting. Should be spaced 3 feet apart. Fast growing, well branched, 
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AMERICAN HAZEL (Corylus Americana) hybrid. Grows 6 feet. Beautiful bush producing the largest hazel nuts 
in the world, about the size of Filbert. Grows fast, bears heavily. Fall foliage is of various colors and shades. 
More than one should be planted for cross-pollination. Fine for clumps or hedges, planted 3 feet apart they fill 
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’ MULBERRIES—A new variety, becomes a good size tree in short order. Bears 4-6 weeks, producing huge 
quantities of fruit. The berries are a deep, glossy black, very large with a most exquisite flavor. Unexcelled 
for table use, juice or wine, no sugar needed. Should’ bear first year ......ccsccssecssscesccscsscsocesccssressoescnceee 5-6 ft. $2.25 
We do not ship these trees in fall. 
PLEASE READ CAREFULLY 
TRANSPLANTING SIZE AND TIME— 
Nut trees should not be transplanted much over six feet in heighth, 2 to 5 feet is better and moved only in 
spring or fall when dormant. Smaller trees quickly catch up to and out-grow a seven foot moved tree. 
ROOT PRUNING— 
A root pruned nut tree is one that has had part of the main or tap root removed when young by cutting through 
the soil. A transplant is one that has been moved one or more times and root pruned. This treatment causes 
the tree to develop a branched or lateral fibrous root system or many more roots than it would have ordinarily 
and when moved to permanent location needs no cutting back. All our trees are carefully hand dug. 
BEARING AGE— 
Hardy varieties of nut trees come into bearing six to eight years from seed, with the exception of hickory 
and pecan. These should bear as soon as the slower varieties of apples. 
