GRAPES 
Concord ee Wie hae 25c each; 5 for $1.00 
SNiapar ae ae Wate mania iih hey wale 25c each 
me VWATCelme eee eer ate eee ee ere 25c each 
Number of Trees and Plants per Acre 
Varieties; distance apart—number per acre 
Apples; 30x30 = Trees 48 
Apricots 20x20 = Trees 108 
Cherries, Sour 18x18= Trees 134 
Cherries, Sweet 24x24 = Trees 75 
Grapes 8x8= Vines 680 
Peaches 18x18= Trees 1384 
Pears 26x 26= Trees 64 
Plums 16x16=Trees 170 
Plums 18x18 = Trees 134 
Blackberries 3x6 = Bushes 2420 
Red Raspberries 3x 6= Bushes 2420 
SPECIAL BARGAINS 
(LAX USmOleeene: altee LO cel te CAC ese cee $ 5.00 
SO aLeeN Oey a V1 a 1 CS eee een A ee ee ee 2.00 
Reda MV ap] 6 Svea ne see 5 been es eee Fe, 2.00 to 4.00 
uli perurees elu tt 2tOy ett Gach seems eee eee 1.00 
Hiunormlesss HoneyalLocust)) each se.) so) ss ee 1.00 
Boxwood sea Chasers Say see l ee ee 2 ee ee ed 1.00 
WiliLomh low erin 2aeDORWOOd fares =) eee 3.00 
RedgOak wietlgtoccett: each s ste ee eter: 1.06 
IB ULTEO AK were Use LO cel by ce ee ee ee 75 per foot 
‘Wayzata Everbearing Strawberries 
Bush Type-— No Runners 
Under intensive irrigation we recommend the 
Wayzata Bush type divisions above all others. It 
is the favorite of about 99% of our customers. 
The Wayzata is a very large, strong vigorous 
plant about ten to twelve inches high the second 
year if it has been well fed and watered. The berries 
are very large and more uniform than most varieties. 
The first bloom is generally the largest berry of 
the eight on the flower stem. Flowers are Carried 
high making it by far the easiest everbearing to pick. 
The seeds are so small that they are hardly no- 
ticed. The flavor of the Wayzata is mild and sweet. 
It is excellent for freezing and requires little sugar 
when canning. 
The Wayzata is perfect flowering needing no other 
variety to pollinate it. 
It is bush type because only two or three plants 
out of a hundred have any runners. Some Wayzata 
are semi-bush type and sell at a cheaper price as 
they are propagated from runner stock. These run- 
ner plants resemble the Gemzata. We recommend 
that the plants be set fifteen inches to eighteen 
inches apart in the row and that the rows be two 
and one half feet apart. 
Plant them a little lower than they grew in the 
Nursery because the water will wash away the soil 
between the rows when using intensive irrigation 
which all everbearing strawberries require. 
We prefer irrigation rather than mulch, and 
irrigate on an average every four days except when 
