Return Postage Guaranteed 
0. S. GRAY NURSERY 
Box 513, Arlington, Texas 
@ Perhaps nothing about a home can give more pleasure than a well- 
planned garden where we may sit alone or in company with our 
friends. It need not be formal or expensive, but may be planned with 
the simple beauty of spreading trees, a well-clipped lawn of grass 
with surrounding hedge and here and there the enticing beauty and 
color of nodding. flowers. 
Above photo taken when the papershell 
peoan orchard was about 14 years old. 
Sec. 34.66 P. L. &R. 
*PAID 
U. §. POSTAGE 
Arlington, Texas 
Permit No. 7 
@ The charm and fascination of a home depends much upon trees and 
shrubs and flowers. There are many homes of which passing strangers 
inquire, “Who lives in that lovely home?” There is unending satis- 
faction and delight—and a great pride—in the possession of a home 
made lovely by its trees and flowers. 
LIKE THESE! 
Will grow on almost any soil. Every home 
can have delicious peaches — fresh and 
Sweet right from your own trees. While it 
1S In season, there is no 
fruit eaten and enjoyed 
by so man 
peach, y people as the 
Reanim 
(Listed im approximate order of ripening.) 
GOLDEN JUBILEE—A sure producer of delicious yellow flesh freestone 
peaches of good size and good quality. One of the most dependable 
producers. A little too soft for shipping except to local market. 
HALEHAVEN—Larae, beautifully colored, prolific, hardy. One of our very 
best early freestone yellow-fleshed shipping or home peaches. A 
most profitable commercial variety. Good shipping or canning Ripens 
about a week after Golden Jubilee and 2 weeks before Elberta. 
EARLY ELBERTA—Delicious yellow fleshed freestone that is an excellent 
producer. 
SULLIVAN’S EARLY ELBERTA—A newer variety ripening about a week 
ahead of the regular Elberta and almost identical with it otherwise. 
This peach seems to be one of our best varieties, try it 
BLBERTA—tThe old reliable, well known yellow fleshed freestone familiar 
to everybody. Still the most widely planted peach in the world. 
FRANK—A yellow fleshed clingstone of fine flavor that ripens about two 
weeks after Elberta. Small seed, delicious. Where moisture is ayail- 
able for this late ripening peach, you'll like it. 
“The 
Grayway 
is the Best 
Way—Go 
Grayway 
all the Way” 
PRICES 
Not Prepaid. Shipment By Express or Motor Freight Only 
2-year, branched trees. 
8 to 4 few c canes 
Ato 5 Fie) os cs «cee a eee 
5 t0-6 i isc cece ee cb peeks 
— 
\ 
OVER 1,000 POUNDS PER ACRE | & 
f 5|X WEEKS—Earliest good plum to npen. 
BRUCE—Very large, very red. Eating or cooking, 
This beautiful young papershell pecan 
United States Government, and was planted for the purpose of studying | 
the management and possibilities of commercial pecan growing. 
Papershell-pecans-at the rate of well over 1,600 pounds per acre eee 
Graywoy PLUMS 
Graywoy APPLES 
HOLLAND (Also called Kincaid) —Huge size, at- 
tractive, early production. 
Grayway PEARS 
KEIFFER—The common southern preserving pear. 
Grayway Grown 
varieties for this section and it will not disappoint you. 
100 PLANTS POSTPAID $3.50 
100 PLANTS POSTPAID $4.50 
| 
PILES 
i 2 y—I 
f LY WONDER (Same as Dew-Black)—In our 
ator this is the best of the blackberries. Very 
hardy, very prolific producer of large fruits. Does not 
1 require staking. Drought resistant, and we don’t ever 
| recall seeing it fail to produce a crop. Truly an out- 
standing blackberry that you can depend upon to pro- 
Vide berries for your own use or for market. Produces 
1,000 to 2,000 gallons per acre of large, attractive 
berries. Ripens June. 4 
PRICES:10 for $1.00; 50 for $4; 100, $6; 
1,000, $40.0 
i wberr 
WBERRY—A_ vigorous, prolific dewbe 
r Gers fee a very profitable and reliable variety for 
| a long time. Ripens in May-June. 
PRICES: 10 for $1.50; 25, $3.00. 
EVERBEARING 
STRAWBERRIES 
Enjoy this delicious fruit 
fresh from your own gar- 
den! Grayway-grown Ev- 
erbearing Strawberry 
plants come direct from 
our own field at Arling- 
ton, 
i grown and immensely popular variety. Has large, red fruits of top quolity that has sat- 
ei Mec folks for years. It is somewhat easier to grow than Streamliner, and a splendid all- 
around strawberry that produces over a long period. We have selected Gem as one 
ariety that is making friends because of the long period of, production of extra large, 
Cistlcivee Pepe Fruits all summer and into the fall under good care. We know of a patch of 
STREAMLINER strawberries grown near Arlington, planted 
in February that started bearing in 
March. and bore all summer and through Christmas a couple of years ago. A sensational berry. EA 
° 
have been harvested from several varieties before the orchard was 
seventeen years of age. 
the finest EA 
° 
This unusual blackberry blooms here after May 10th and escapes frosts, 
Berries start fo ripening about 
August. The originator’ gave Us 
“The first year’s growth is 
third year they put out two to 
four to six feet.” 
"The fruits are round, good siz® SWeet, yet enough acid for jams and 
has rubber-like skin but not tough, making ft 4 
ry thorny, but berries grow on a long 
thirty berries. Ninety percent of the fruit 
jellies. Excellent keeper, E 
Plants are Ve 
wonderful shipper. 
fruit stem in clusters of seven to 
the following information: 
inclined to droop to the ground; second and 
six tree-like canes that. attain a height of 
20th and continue through July and 
TEXAS EVERBEARING 
WILL BEAR DELICIOUS FIGS THIS SUMMER 
Grayway Grown 
orchard belongs to the kb SAPA—-A small cherry plum, one of best ¢ooking. GARBER—Ripens few weeks ahead of Keiffer. RING: DAViD—Medium size, red. Enormous pro- 
4 2 “year treeS .....-- 1 45 Let «£1 sat : ucer. 
3 to 5 ft., branched, 2-year trees $ Escons Prolific, juicy, good flavor. Ripens DOUBLE RED DELICIOUS—Grown from coast te 
L Grayway APRICOTS n eonye coast. 
EARLY. GOLDEN—Larae, one of the earliest BARTLETT—The well known pear that gets sweet. YELLOW DELICIOUS — Well-known outstanding 
; MOOREPARK, Freestone. Good quality. Sweet, Gray's COW-PEAR—Originated by a cow. Eating, Apple. - 
fe SHAMROCK—Origin near Shamrock, Texas. canning. Bte5 ft., branched, : $1.25. and $2.45 Uiee B 7 
fronched 2-rdrs Sees. 5) FURR PRES Price aoc, HOM Prepare ANE NKS a s 
Grayway GRAPES | Bin Bates ees eit ee hau ae 95¢ and $1.25 Sart ; rie 
/ —Resistant to root-rot. Blac erries. ae wiinou CUP. 
A FR Nar oe eaiaen grape, excellent quality. S17 gehts PuanChs cre q e pe indy Kaper ome: 5 
GARMAN—One of the most fool-proof. Black 8 to 12 ft., heavy branched, some have PRICE: 4 to 5 ft. Sere se $2.50 each 
MT OESHNGY falcis ivcicicniee eae Weipa: 50¢ and 756 borne Pears) s.o%70) bps 15 « a !erv's $4.95 to $6.50 (Fruit Prices are Not Prepaid) 
r 
Culture: Set plants 10 to 12 inches apart, either in rows 21/5 to 3 ft. apart, or in beds 2 to 3 ft. wide. Plant on raised 
beds for drainage. Strawberries: like a, mellow, fertile soil and ample though not excessive moisture throughout the bearing 
seasoh. Clay soils may be loosened by spading in sand, peat moss, etc. Since a large strawberry patch is not neecssary to 
supply on ordinary family, it is not too expensive to prepare the soil on a small area. While we grow our strawberries ‘right 
out in the open, we advise home growers to try to give them some shade, especially from the west sun. 
- BLACKBERRIES - DEWBERRIES- BOYSENBERRY 
Gray's GIANT THORNLESS BOYSENBERRY—Think of 
raising berries two inches long! We could hardly be~ 
lieve our eyes when we first saw them. Hardy, Vigorous 
canes 15 to 20 feet long, covered with enormous ber- 
ries growing on a trellis, up and out of the dirt. Few 
seeds. Distinctive flayor reminding of combination, 
loganberry, blackberry. and raspberry. Delicious for 
table, market, canning, freezing, juice, etc. You'll @ 
enoy picking these enormous berries without bothering 
about thorns. Plant 8 ft. apart in 6 or 8 ft. rows. 
PRICE: 10 for $1.50, 25, $3.50; 100, $13 
on our vines grows on limbs ex tending above the thorns. 
“The fruit is borne up off the 9feund and ninety-five per cent is free 
from dirt) regardless of weather From a two-year old plant we have 
gathered three. gallons, or 24 pounds. Three-year plants have broken all 
records with a yield of 6 gallons, O48 pounds of fruit from one plant, 
or at the rate of more than 71/4 tons Per acre, planted 12 x 12 feet, without 
any fertilizer,”’ , 
“We now have some 325 five-Y@Qr-old plants from which we sold their 
entire crop this year at $1.00 to $1.35 ber gallon, there being no other ber~- 
ries on the market when they ripe: Fine commercial possibilities 
“They have shown no sign of disease, People in towns and cities may 
grow all the berries they can use from six plants in the yard or small 
garden.” ‘ 
Ready-to-bear 2-year plants that should bear some 
the first summer. 
ee eee whee 
Not | | 
Prepaid | Postpaid | 
2) plante 2232.2..--- serps] $2.00 | $2.75 | 
5 plants ...... woke 425 | __ 5.00 | 
“Go Graywey AU The Way” 
FIGS THIS SUMMER! 
Gather your own figs this coming summer from. Grayway’s TEXAS 
BVERBEARING jumbo fig bushes, We think this is one of the finest of 
all fig varieties. 
Bears heavily on little trees just a few inches high in the nursery 
rows. Figs from June until frost. Seems to do better farther north 
than most figs. Good size, straw colored fruit that rarely cracks. Ex- 
cellent, sweet flavor. 
We have known over $400 per acre to be sold from an orchard of 
Texas Everbearing figs 
Every GRAYWAY Texas Everbearing Fig bush in our nursery bore 
figs this past summer, and you can transplant one to your own yard. 
In northern sections, this fig will bear each summer if the roots can be 
protected from freezing; or, the plant might be dug up and carried 
through the winter in moist packing material protected from freezing, 
and replanted the following spring. Try it! 7 
BEARING PLANTS 
(Not prepaid) 
Sallie neues one SO0¢ Ea, Lorge ...........-95¢ 
Medium (18-24 in.) 75¢€ Special 
ARLINGTON, TEXAS 
lo-MILE WEST OF ARLINGTON 
ON FORT WORTH-DALLAS HIGHWAY 80 
