








































\\ination. 
put plant them 
ion field- 














oe you'll want — 
pearet, full-flavo 
A fine bis. purple- 
{ lowd, and in the 
ryelous flavor: 
Cherry): 
habits south ° 
rer which has aS 








_ Aheavy Bee \y, making it per 
ons evenly: t— th: 
heavy bearet re ow the biggest AES i 
Tah naa et A me of 4 
ORENCY This is the Bia es and cherry ca aae a for everything Vg 
5 pies a 3 
MONTM' yelicious, too, for F ye blacks; ao of the % 
ee -annind Del Wi es tee plackest of the rs atlget ane gone- One i 
‘ ee among the Ko Extra large ater most of the other V¥ " 
tops ‘ OR nae ste, allet q 
LisH MOREL! aipens late: EES 5 
ae canning, jellies Riper TIES OF CHERRY TR $1 39 each i 
eating onerries LL VARIE ize trees : 9 ach fi 
i Aiest of Cf ON A 16 i 
hardiest PRICES 69 each 3 to ; i | 
$- / 
| 
: 
12-inch size trees 98 each 
2 to 3-ft. size trees 
Fine, field-grown, heavy-rooted trees. Plant several in your 
yard and eat tree-ripened, luscious figs from your own trees. 
* Make preserves that can’t be beat. 
MAGNOLIA—large, sweet, greenish-yellow when ripe. 
BROWN TURKEY—medium, sweet, greenish-bronze. 
PROLIFIC—very heavy bearer, sure grower—a dandy. 
Strong field grown plants, 35c each; bearing size, 98c each. 
Postpaid. 



or people who have limited spaces in which 
to plant trees. This is a “one tree apple 
orchard” in itself, becatise it’s just as good 
as it sounds—five different varieties of ap- 
ples growing on the same ‘tree, and-they 
ripen at different times during the year. The 
five varieties are Red Delicious, Yellow 
Delicious, Red Rome Beauty, Yellow Trans- 
parent, and Anoka. Big ripe apples from 
one tree five different times during the year. 
Price on strong heavy rooted 3-4 ft. 5-N-1 
Apple trees $1.98 each. Postpaid. 
| i Persimmon; large; sweet fruit in fall, deli- 
cious for eating. Heavy bearer. Be SURE 


ommonly called the “Oriental” or “Jap” 




to include these in your order! 
Price: Strong 2 to 3-ft. size trees, $1.49 each 
Postpaid. 


iful Pp 
+ — beautifu 
o-way yrea 
A tw akes a 
cherries and plums, bearing delicious plum-size fruits _ 
of cherry red. The flavor is neither plum nor cherry — 
but the best of both! Prolific, low, bushy grower. | 
Price: Strong 2 to 3-ft trees, 69c each; 2 for $1.29 
Postpaid. 





Anyone who lives in Ameri- 
ca and doesn’t plant grapes 
is missing a fine thing—for — 
grapes will grow in almost 
any kind of -soil, can be 
planted where there is 
“standing room only” as 
long as there is a fence for 
them to climb on — and 
what’s more delicious than 
fresh grapes from your own vines? There’s a good, steady 
market for any excess, too! ‘ 
NIAGARA. Big, compact bunches of yellowish-whiis 
berries — sweetest and most popular of white grapes. 
Abundant bearer. ~ 
CARMEN. Vigorous grower which produces extra-large 
usters; compact and well-formed. Medium black; prob- 
ably the most satisfactory all-purpose grape available. 
CONCORD. The best known—and the best seller. Blue- 
black, large bunches, heavy beater year after year. Ten- 
der, sweet, delicious. Fine for commercial vineyards. ~ 
CACO. A rich, very sweet amber grape which can't ke 
beat; large bunches ripen in September. This is a very 
hardy. variety. ’ 
DELAWARE. Big yield of top quality reddish-blue ~ 
grapes, big bunches. Fine for eating or for jellies. The 
most satisfactory grape grown. ns is 
FREDONIA. The earliest-ripening of the black grapes— 
often called’ the ‘Early Concord.” Big, heavy clusters, 
delightful flavor. rs . 
MOORE'S EARLY. Large, compact bunches of blue- 
black, excellently-flavored berries, ripening before Con- 
cords but after Fredonias. , . 
MUSCAT. A large. heavy-bearing blue-black grape of 
unusual juiciness and with excellent flesh; an old favorite 
for wines. Good grower and year-in, year-out producer. 
Prices on all varieties grape if 
vines, strong, heavy, field-grown, 
25c each; 10 for 19c each; 100 
for 15¢ each. 


































An unbeatable-hybrid—-the perfect.cross between. 






