. Green's Nursery Co. : [catalogue]. Nursery stock New York (State) Rochester Catalogs; Fruit trees Seedlings Catalogs. Morello or Hardy PRICES TOR CHERRY Hardy Varieties.—Eng. Morello, Early Richmond, Montmorency, etc., large size, 15c. each; $ per 12; $ per 100. Medium size, 12c. each; $ per 12; $ per 100. Sweet Varieties.—Windsor, Black Tar- tarian, Napoleon, large size, 15c. each; $ per 12; $ per 100. Medium size, 12c. each; $ per 12; $ per 100. Centennial, 50c. each. Early Richmond Cherry.—An early, red, magnificent cherry; very val-
. Green's Nursery Co. : [catalogue]. Nursery stock New York (State) Rochester Catalogs; Fruit trees Seedlings Catalogs. Morello or Hardy PRICES TOR CHERRY Hardy Varieties.—Eng. Morello, Early Richmond, Montmorency, etc., large size, 15c. each; $ per 12; $ per 100. Medium size, 12c. each; $ per 12; $ per 100. Sweet Varieties.—Windsor, Black Tar- tarian, Napoleon, large size, 15c. each; $ per 12; $ per 100. Medium size, 12c. each; $ per 12; $ per 100. Centennial, 50c. each. Early Richmond Cherry.—An early, red, magnificent cherry; very val- uable for cooking early in the season. Ripens through June. Tree a free grower; hardy, healthy and very productive. One of the best. "If I could plant but one cherry, it "would be Early Richmond, early Richmond. sayS American Agri- culturist. uFor Illinois, I know of no cherry but Early Richmond that can be relied upon for market. For home use the Montmorency is val- uable," says A. G. Hammond, Secretary of the Illinois State Horticultural Society. It is a safe, reliable, worthy favorite. I have at our fruit farm two rows and a half of Early Richmond cherry trees, each row contain- ing about forty trees. These trees are not large, having been planted but about ten years. We find them the most profitable tree upon our place, the yield often being from two dollars and a half to four dollars per tree, or $500 to $800 per acre. At our Rochester place we have four cherry trees which bring us in every year from twenty to forty dollars. We are told by the former owner that he sold the fruit one season for sixty dollars from these four trees. Prof. L. H. Bailey says that the cherry is a neglected fruit in Western New York, there being no orchards, though the demand is good in open market and in canneries. Surely nothing will pay better than a cherry orchard and there is no safer variety to plant than the Early Richmond, which bears at a very early age. We often see
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