Exclusive with Stumpp & Walter Co. Are... 
THE VEGETABLE SEED COLLECTIONS 
described on page 23. They're unprecedented value. 

FRUIT TREES 
STANDARDS 
Purchaser pays transportation on fruit trees 
APPLES 6-7 &. 
$3.50 each, $38.50 per doz. 
Should produce fruit the fourth year and con- 
tinue for haif a century. Plant 40 feet apart. 
Baldwin. (Late.) Deep red. All purpose. 
Delicious. (Late.) Dark red eating Apple. 
Greening. (Winter.) Large yellow-green fruit. 
Grimes Golden. (Late.) One of the best-flavored 
Apples grown; aromatic and delicious. Skin 
vellow. 
Hyslop. (Crab.) Red and yellow striped. 
McIntosh. (Late.) Dark red, white-fleshed. 
Red Rome Beauty. (Late.) Vigorous grower, 
with fine all-red, round fruit; often bearing a year 
sooner than most, 
Stayman Winesap. (Winter.) Yields bumper 
crops of good bright Apples, which keep re- 
markably well. 
Williams’ Early Red. (Early.) One of the best. 
Yellow Delicious. (Late.) Large; golden yellow. 
Yellow Transparent. (Early summer.) Fruit 
medium to large, with yellow, waxy skin. 

Bing Cherries 
CHERRIES 5-6 ft. 
First 6 kinds, $4.50 each, $49.50 per doz. 
Sweet Cherries do wei! on light land and grow into 
larger trees than the sour variety which thrives 
in heavier soil, Plant 25 feet apart. 
Bing. (Midseason; sweet.) Very hardy, almost 
black. Recommended. 
Black Tartarian. (Early; sweet.) Large, black. 
Governor Wood. (Early; sweet.) Large, yellow. 
Improved Montmorency. (Midseason; sour.) 
Attractive red fruit with firm flesh. 
Sweet September. Patent No. 94. (Late; sweet.) 
Yellow Spanish. (Sweet.) Amber. 
Hansen Bush. The fruit of this Bush Cherry 
resembles a plum in size and shape; it comes in 
clusters completely covering the branches. The 
bush grows 5 to 6 feet tall and usually bears the 
second year. Good flavor; excellent for eating 
and making jams and jellies. 2-yr. plants, 18 to 
24 in., $1 each, $11 per doz. 
The Welcome Gift 
Of our thousands of merchandise items, 
many make ideal PRESENTS for anniversaries, 
birthdays, Easter, Mother’s Day, Christmas or 
merely to say “thank you’’—a collection of 
seeds; new dahlias, perheps; roses, perennials, 
Epicure foods or some garden gadget. 

26 Choice Fruits 



Dig hole 2 ft. by 2ft. Have earth-mark on tree one inch below surface; 
work soil around roots. Fill hole to the top; then water freely. 

The ideal home-garden—fruits, vegetables and flowers 
APRICOTS 6-7 ft. 
$4.50 each, $49.50 per doz. 
Earlier than most peaches; fruits are small but 
numerous. 
Early Golden. Fruits large; almost peach-like in 
PEACHES «6-7 &. 
$3.50 each, $38.50 per doz. 
Should begin to yield the second year; they 
usually live ten to fifteen years. Plant 20 feet apart. 
Belle of Georgia. (Late.) White freestone. 
size. : : 
Alexander. Cold-resistant variety; small sweet Elberta. (Midseason.) Yellow freestone. 
Hiley. (Early.) White freestone. 
poe TF J. H. Hale. (Midseason.) Yellow freestone. 
Red Haven. (Early.) Fine yellow freestone. 
QUINCE 5-6 i. 
Orange. Excellent for cooking and preserving. 
An early variety, and good. $4.50 each, $49.50 
per doz. 
PEARS 5-7 t:. 
$4 each, $44 per doz. 
Will grow on any good loamy soii, preferably one 
on the heavy side. Plant 20 feet apart and they 
should begin to yield the third year after planting. 
Anjou. (Late fall.) Large yellow Pear blushed red. 
Bartlett. (Late summer.) Large yellow fruit. 
Seckel. (Autumn.) Small brown fruit. io 
Kieffer. (Autumn.) Gold, blushed red. 
NUTS 
Landscape Your Grounds with Food Plants 
Black Walnut (Juglans nigra). Handsome spread- 
Ing tree, eventually reaching 100 feet. Starts 
early, bearing delicious, but hard-shelled nuts. 
Z to 3-ft. saplings, $2 each, $5.75 for 3, $22 per 
oz. 
English Walnut (Juglans regia). Matures at 
75 feet; eventually produces a heavy annual crop 
of nuts in latitudes south of New York City, 
where, and innearby New England it isan effective 
shade tree. 2 to 3-{t. saplings, $3.50 each, $10.25 
for 3, $38.50 per doz. 
Hazel Nut (American Filbert). Maturing at 10 
feet, attractive bush yields abundant crops of 
palatable round nuts. 2 to 3 ft., $3.50 each, 
$10.25 for 3, $38.50 per doz. 
Chinese Hybrid Chestnuts (blight-resistant) of- 
fered on page 79. ® 
PLUMS «6-7 &. 
$4.50 each, $49.50 per doz., except where stated. 

~Plums do best on rather heavy clay soils but will 
give good results. almost anywhere. Broken or 
diseased branches are pruned out late each winter. 
Abundance. Flesh light yellow, very sweet. 
Burbank. Large dark violet frurt. 
Italian Prune. Large fruit, purplish blue-black. 
Shropshire Damson. Clusters of rather small 
fruit; ideal home-garden variety. 
Stanley. Midseason, late. Splendid large dark 
blue, sweet Prune. 
Howard’s Miracle. Newest and best-tasting 
Plum grown. See illustration on next page. $2 
each, $5.75 for 3, $22 per doz. 

Fruit trees need the help of plant nutrients 
offered on pages 101 and 102, and sprayers and 
dusters listed in our implement section. See 
pages 99 and 100 for appropriate fungicides and 
insecticides. 

May we draw your attention to the Warranty 
under which our products are sold? Details on 
page 104, 


Bartlett Pears 

STUMPP & WALTER CO. 
