Historic, Archive Document

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PB 1 1 1920

CATALOGUE

OF THE

L1TSON NURSERY

ESTABLISHED 1889

W. H. LITSON, Proprietor

Packing House and Office on West Walnut Street Five Blocks West of Electric Light Plant

NEVADA, MISSOURI

Our Representative Will Not Annoy You

OUR REPRESENTATIVE, which is this Catalog, taps at your door i.n a very modest and unassuming manner. If you have not time to receive him the moment of the day he calls, he will wait unobtrusively for an hour of leisure. We have no desire that you should purchase

W. H. LITSON The Man Behind the Trees.

anything that you do not need, but if we can be of any service to you it will be a pleasure to wait upon you.

We are positive that, whoever buys our trees and plants will get back in money, health or pleasure, many times as much as he pays out. Indeed, as the years roll on and age increases, it is a pleasure to consider how many hundred homes we

have brightened and increased in actual money value by the products of our nurs- eries. How unlike the traffic of the to- bacconist or the distiller of liquors is the growing of trees and flowering plants. One tends to degrade the other to ele- vate and nourish.

We grow and have for sale all the leading kinds and varieties of standard fruit trees, vines and plants, such as apple, pear, peach, plum, cherry, crab, apricot and quince, grape, raspberry, blackberry, strawberry, gooseberry and currants, evergreens, roses, ornamental shrubbery shade trees, weeping orna- mental trees, bulbs and tubers, rhubarb and asparagus. Cabbage, tomato and sweet potato plants in season.

We also grow ana have for sale all of the most promising new kinds of fruit trees and plants.

Being sole owner of the nursery and having no other conflicting business, we give our entire attention to the manage- ment. We superintend our grafting and budding in person use nothing but first- class healthy roots, and cut well-matured scions and buds from healthy, young, bearing fruit trees, as much as possible, and can furnish budded, grafted, whole or piece roots, worked on tap root seed- lings— no side roots used in grafting.

Now is the time to plant. Just one word more and' we are done. If you are planning to plant, do not delay. Delays are dangerous. Now is the accepted time. A year lost in the growth of your plants and trees is an unnecessary loss.

Should you favor us with your order, we pledge our honor that we will serve you well. We are here to see that no patron is neglected.

Call on or drop us a card, and make your wants known.

Nursery on West Walnut Street, five blocks west of electric light plant.

Correspondence invited. Address

W. H. LITSON,

Nevada, Missouri

THE LITSON NURSERY, NEVADA, MISSOURI

Apple Trees

Sweet June,^<xolden Sweet, Summer Queen, Duchess^ of Oldenberg, ^Yellow Transparent, Benoni.

Fall Maiden Blush, 'Lowell, Rambo, Ful- ton, Ij)omine,VPa. Red Streak, Bailey Sweet," Snow.

Winter Ben Davis, Lvine Sap, Rome Beauty, Willow Twig,|/G. G. Pippin, Jonathan, Minkler, Janett, Huntsman, -"Tallin^n , Sweet, Romanstem VLamsdell Sweet, 'Little RomaniteXM. B. Twig, ^Gano, Jork Imperial, Ark. Blacl^ Wolf River, Ingram, Payne’s, Late Keeper.

Crabs Transcendant, eoulard, Hyslop, Whitney No. 20.

Cherries

Early Richmond, H^ay Duke, English Morellcy Large Montmorenci, Late Rich- mond,^^Dyehouse.

Pears

Standard and Dwarfs, Leading Varieties

Ripening, in the order named: Clapp’s

Favorite, Plowell, Lincoln, Vicar of Wake-

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field,' Bartlett, Duchess D’Angouleme, F. Beautyj^TCieffer^Seckle, ^Luffum.

Apricots

L-Larly Golden, Moorepark, Russian, Budd, Alexis, Gibb.

Quince

Angers, Orange, ^Missouri Mammoth, ^--'Champion,1 Lleeches.

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THE LITSON NURSERY, NEVADA, MISSOURI

Peaches

Leading Varieties

Named in the order of ripening: Sneed, Greensboro, Fitzgerald, Alexander, Ark- ansaw Traveler* Early Rivers', ^Capt. Ede, Carman, Mt. RoseU Crosby, O. M. Free,

Elberta, Triumph; Early Crawford, Sus- quehanna, Stump, Wonderful, / Q. M. Cling, Smock, Chined s^" Cling, Heath’s Cling^/Champion, lGlobe/Y.ate Crawford, ^yAjiemon Cling, £Ft> steiT Salwa, Piquett’s Late.

Grape Vines

Brighton, red j'-'Concord, black; Martha, white; Moore’s Early, black; Niagara,

white; Worden, black. We have other varieties than the above in small quan- tities.

Strawberries

I grow my strawberry plants especially for the plants, not for the fruit alone. I plant each variety separate and dig with forked hoes so as not to injure the roots; therefore you get nice, large, well-

rooted plants whereas if you buy from farmers and small fruit growers (those who grew for fruit alone), you get only the small plants from the end of the runners.

i s'

Varieties Aroma (S), Bubach (P), Cres- cent (P)j Gandy Dunlap (S), Warfield (P), ^Tennessee Prolific (S).

Those varieties marked with an S are the staminate or perfect flowered varie- ties.

Those marked P are the pistillate or imperfect flowered variety.

For further explanation, see page 16 of my hand book, “How to Plant and Grow Fruit.”

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THE LITSON NURSERY, NEVADA, MISSOURI

Blackberries

Early King, Early Harvest, Mercereau, Blowers, Kittatinny,I'''Erie.

Raspberries

Black Caps Souhegan, early; Ohio, mid- season; Kansas, early; Ajregg, late.

Red Varieties Cnthbert, Miller’s Red, Turner, Louden, Cardinal, Early King, Haymaker.

Plums

Standard Varieties

Wild Goose, Miner, Burbank, Abun- dance, Wickson, Red June, Blue Dam- son, Lombard, German Prune. Gooseberries Houghton, D o w n i n g, Smith’s Improved.

Currants^-Cherry, White Dutch, Red Dutch, ^Fay’s Prolific.

Rhubarb, or Pie Plant Myatt’s Linneus, very large and tender.

Asparagus Conover’s Colossal, Palmetto.

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THE LITSON NURSERY, NEVADA, MISSOURI

Ornamental Department

Shade Trees Soft Maple, Hard Maple,

Box Elder, Ash, Elm, R. Mulberry,

White Birch, Catalpa, Sweet Chestnut,

Linn, Balm of Gilead, Carolina Poplar,

Lombardy Poplar, Tulip Tree.

Evergreens Red Cedar, Norway Spruce,

Scotch Pine, Arbor Vitae, Irish Juni- per, White Pine, Austrian Pine, Hem- lock Fir, Balsam Fir.

Weeping Ornamental Trees Cut Leaf Weeping Birch, Weeping Willow, Wis- consin Weeping Willow, T’s Weeping Mulberry, Weeping Elm.

Shrubs Hydrangea, Purple Fringe, Al- thea, Purple Lilac, Snowball, Spirea,

Persian Lilac, Wegelia, Deutzia, Caly-

Roses

Lyonnaise, cream yellow; Clio, blush; Magna Charta, bright pink; John Hop- per, red; Mrs. Degraw, pink; Gen Jac- queminot, red; American Beauty, pink; Kaiserin Augusta Victoria, cream white; Baby Rambler.

Climbing Roses White Dorothy Perkins, Mary Washington, white; Dorothy Per- kins, bright pink; Baltimore Belle, blush; Yellow Rambler, Crimson Ram- bler; Seven Sisters, blush; Prairie Queen, pink; Empress of China, bright pink; Blue Rose.

Climbers Virginia Creeper, Scar Honey- suckle, Wistaria, Trumpet Flower, W. Honeysuckle, Frag. Honeysuckle.

Moss Roses Princess Adelaide, pale; Salet, light; Gracilic, deep pink; Blan- cia Moreau, pure white; Henry Mar- tin, fine, clear rose.

Bulbs and Tubers Bleeding Heart, Dah- lias, mixed; Lilies, tiger; Peonias, light pink and red; Peonies, white; Tube- rose; Lilies, white, Tulips, mixed.

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Croquette de Alps, white; Croquette des Blanches, white; Gen. Washington, red; Mrs. J. H. Laing, pink; Paul Ney-

Coquette de Alps

ron, large pink; Black Prince, dark crim- son; Margaret Dickson, white; La France, satin pink; Burbank, red; Glorie

anthus, Wegelia Va., Flowering Al- mond, Japonica, Bridal Wreath, Syrin-

Hydrangea

ga, Barberry, purple leaves, Bechtel’s Double Flowering Crab.

THE LITSON NURSERY, NEVADA, MISSOURI

Distances for Planting

FRUIT TREES

Apples, plant 30 feet apart, 50- to acre.

Pears, standard, and Cherries, plant 20 feet apart, 108 to acre.

Plums, Peaches and Apricots, plant 16 feet apart, 170 to acre.

Pears (Dwarf) and Quinces, plant 12 feet apart, 300 to acre

SMALL FRUIT PLANTS

Grapes, rows 8 feet apart, plants 8 feet apart, 680 to acre.

Currants, Gooseberries, rows 4 feet apart, plants 4 feet apart, 2,725 to acre. Raspberries, Blackberries, rows 7 feet apart, plants 3 feet apart, 2,070 to acre. Strawberries, rows 3 y2 feeet apart, plants 1 *4 feet apart, 10,000 to acre.

Asparagus, rows 5 feet apart, plants 2 feet apart, 4,386 to acre.

Rhubarb, rows 4 feet apart, plants 4 feet apart, 2,725 to acre.

Weight of Trees and Plants Packed

Fruit trees, 4 to 6 feet, weigh about 100 pounds to 100 trees.

Fruit trees, 3 to 4 feet, weigh about 25 to 50 pounds to 100 trees.

Grape Vines, Currants, Gooseberries and Blackberries weigh 10 to 25 pounds per 100 Raspberries, about 5 to 10 pounds per 100 plants.

Strawberrries, about 20 to 25 pounds per 1,000 plants.

Terms and Conditions

REMITTANCES Postoffice or Express Money Order, Registered Letter or Bank Draft are the best ways to remit. Any sum less than $1.00 can be paid in two-cent stamps. In ordering, always give plainly postoffice address, and express or freight station, being very careful to give the State.

Fifty trees will be furnished' at hundred rates, five hundred at thousand rates. We have other varieties in small quantities, which will be priced on application.

TERMS OF PAYMENTS Cash or satisfactory security before shipment of stock. All orders to be sent by express, C. O. D., must be accompanied by one-half the amount in cash.

We deliver all goods free of drayage to railroad or express office, after which our responsibility ceases.

All claims for errors or deductions must be made immediately upon receipt of goods.

SHIPPING FACILITIES We ship over the Missouri Pacific and Missouri, Kan- sas & Texas railroads, and American and Wells Fargo express companies, and make close connections with nearly all other lines.

Nursery on West Walnut street, five blocks west of electric light plant.

Address,

W. H. LITSON, Nevada, Missouri.

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THE LITSON NURSERY, NEVADA, MISSOURI

The above is a photo of my new packing house. While it is not as large as the wholesale nursery packing houses, it is plenty large enough for any retail nursery. My trees are dug with a three-horse digger (getting all the roots) ; then they are hauled directly to the packing house, not allowing the roots exposed to the wind and sun over twenty to thirty minutes. There the trees are trenched in the ground inside.

When shipping time comes, the trees are packed in boxes or straw and burlap indoors and never exposed to the weather.

With the above improvements I am as able to grow, pack and ship nursery stock as any modern, up-to-date nursery in the state.

Our Guarantee of Genuineness

WHILE WE EXERCISE THE GREATEST DILIGENCE and care to have all our trees, etc., true to label, and hold our- selves in readiness, on proper proof, to replace all trees, etc., that may prove untrue to label, free of charge, or re- fund the amount paid it is mutually understood and agreed between the purchaser and ourselves, that our guarantee of genuine- ness shall in no case make us liable for any sum greater than orig- inally received for said trees, etc., that prove untrue.

FRUIT-GPOWER & FARMER, ST. JOSEPH, MO.