The ability of our Cherry trees to produce heavy crops has long been known, and these trees 
are generally preferred by orchard-men; they will please you, too. 
SWEET CHERRIES 
3 to 4 ft. trees, well rooted ............ 
4 to 5 ft. 3 year roots, 2 year stems 
Each Each Each 
lto3 4to7 8 or more 
| Tenet. $1.45 $1.35 $1.30 
fe Bae Oe ee 1.80 1.65 1.55 
5 to 6 ft. well branched, choice trees ssi. 2.10 1.90 1.80 
a 
ALL SHIPPING CHARGES INCLUDED—SAFE DELIVERY GUARANTEED. 
6301 — Black Tar- ’ 6303 — Schmidt's ' 6304 — Yellow 
tarian yer rae. vet! ~- Biggarreau- °°} Glass Medium sie. ont 
ae blac k, 
juicy, rich flavored. Tree is a firm cherries, liver-colored, hardiest of all Sweet Cher- 
strong grower and _ highly with outstanding flavor and ries, successful throughout 
eg ae Hardy astar quality. The tree grows to the Mid-West. Being yellow, 
orth as Southern Iowa and very large size, and produces birds rarely bother this Cher- 
Nebraska, also through the its fruit in large clusters. Not ry. Makes a fine canning 
Great Lakes region the East sufficiently hardy North of Cherry. 
and the Pacific states. central Kansas and Missouri. 
for Cherries 
insects or diseases. In few very 
below. 
WHEN TO SPRAY OR 
DUST 
. Just before blooiaing. 
. When the petals fall. 
. Ten days later. 
Two weeks after the fall of the 
petals. 
Four weeks after the fall of the 
petals. 
on sen 
Just after picking 
As soon as the fruit flies appear. In 
case of rain, make additional ap- 
plications. 
BEATRICE, NEBRASKA 
6850 — Nanking Cherry {Prunus, tomen: 
to a height of about 5 feet, with a clean, healthy 
foliage. ighly ornamental in the spring when the 
shrub is covered with white blossoms. Fruit almost as 
large as regular cherries, and of good quality for 
sauce and jelly, and when fully ripe a good fresh 
fruit. Ripens end of June. 2 to 3 ft. nice plants 85¢ each; 
3 for $2.40 postpaid. 
PLANTING INSTRUCTIONS 
Cherries do well most anywhere, except on low 
ground, where the soil is apt to stay very wet for days 
and possibly weeks at a time. The best place to plant 
is on a slope. The soil does not need to be rich, even 
poor soil produces good Cherries. Plant Cherry trees 
20 by 20 feet apart, or plant them as filler trees in the 
Apple orchard. 
Plant Cherry trees so deep that the bud, just above 
the root will be about 1 inch below the soil surface, 
in other words plant about 2 inches deeper than grown 
in the nursery. Cut the ends of all roots smooth with 
a sharp knife just before planting. Water well at plant- 
ing time. The top-branches do not require pruning. ex- 
cept broken branches may be removed. 
13 
