Historic, archived document
Do not assume content reflects current
scientific knowledge, policies, or practices.
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You Can Plan For Your
Near Future Independence
In a Delightful Way!
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From BASS PECAN COMPANY, Lumberton, Mississippi
Pecans Paid for This Homel They Can Bring an Income for Life, Too!
Sec. 562, P. L. & R.
U. S. POSTAGE
lc Paid
Lumberton, Miss.
Permit No. 1
The Largest Growers of Pecan Trees in the World
i
“Pecans Saved Us!”
A Personal Message from
Our President
WERE it not for pecans, I don’t know what would
have happened to our firm and family during the
depression. They proved to be our lifesaver!
Many people did not buy pecan trees as they wished, for
they just did not have the money. Consequently our
business, like everyone else’s, dropped considerably. And
rather than let our trees and grounds go down, as did
many other nurserymen, we took the same fine care of
„ „ „ our property and growing trees as ever before. This cost
President, Bass Pecan Co. , „
us plenty of money.
Also, in spite of the fact that pecans have been cheap in price, and even though
we have had droughts and other calamities during the years of the depression, we got
lots of pecans and they made money for us at a time when we could not sell much of
anything else for cash. They enabled us to provide a living, pay taxes, keep our
business going, and educate our children (four in school — three in college).
So with pecans, we were not only PREPARED FOR THE DEPRESSION, but we
made more on them than we could have with anything else.
At the same time, our orchards kept growing, adding to their own value, as well
as to the value of our land, and in each year to come, they will yield us an even greater
income.
We could have stopped all efforts during the depression and simply coasted with¬
out further sale of trees. We could quit now and retire, but we love our work and
have pride in the name and extent of our firm which has been* carried on for twenty-
eight years, and a third generation is now growing up to continue our life work.
We owe everything to pecans. Give them a chance to become your friends, too.
And since times are better — “NOW YOU CAN PLAN FOR YOUR FUTURE
INDEPENDENCE IN A DELIGHTFUL WAY!”
I. H. BASS
2
Here reigns contentment — and ever growing prosperity. A good-paying pecan grove.
Plant Bass Pecan Trees and Be Independent In Your Old Age.
*•*>■1 - |i<>" ~<>il - - !■<>••
Cows and pecans mix nicely — to their owner’s profit.
Pecans and Cattle—
A great combination that provides immediate and future income
and complete INDEPENDENCE
OUR OWN orchards and nurseries make excellent proving grounds. First, by ex¬
periment, and then by actual practice we have learned that pecans and cattle
make a most profitable combination. The land between the rows of trees is thus
utilized and, as the livestock graze, keeping down the grass and weeds, they fertilize
that land. We have saved thousands of dollars on fertilizer alone through this method.
Also we do not need extra grazing land, nor do we have to tie up land solely for pas¬
ture, keeping it otherwise idle. Good clover will produce good milk and good meat
and thus bring in an immediate income while your pecan trees are growing, and as
they bear nuts there will be that double income.
Nature’s Insurance that Pays Dividends
from the very beginning!
WHEN you plant pecan trees and plan to give them the attention they deserve,
you are really taking out an Insurance Policy with Nature! This policy will
start maturing in just a few years time and provide a regular income for you. It will
prove to be a trust fund, furnishing you with a steady income whereby you may retire
and become completely independent.
The only “premium” to be paid, after planting the finest of trees, is to keep the
ground properly cultivated, and by planting crops between the rows, or clover for cattle,
you will be paying that premium in an easy way, the income from which crop or
cattle will produce immediate revenue.
From the very beginning, Nature starts paying dividends, for your land increases
in value as soon as trees are planted, and the older they become the greater its value.
Nature is kind to those who have the foresight to look ahead — to plan — and to plant!
..€>11 - !!<>•• ••€>!! - !!<>••
“A Stuart pecan tree bought of you hasn't less than 500 or 600 pounds of pecans this
year. One limb has at least 25 to 30 pounds." — dr. g. a. moore, eutaw, ala.
3
— !<>••
Every Bass Pecan Tree is A Bank Bearing Interest.
• - ..€>11 -
Pecan trees growing- in our nursery. Note size and uniformity of our straight healthy stock.
An Investment
That’s Better than Bonds, Safer than Stocks
IT’S MUCH better and healthier to clip your own “coupons” from pecan trees. Stocks
and bonds are subject to someone else’s management — the honesty and ability of
strangers. How many instances there are of people who have invested their life earn¬
ings in worthless paper, whereby an even smaller investment in qKipershell pecans
would have made it possible for them to retire early in life, be
independent, care-free and happy!
Stocks and bonds fluctuate in value, and there’s always that
risk of them going down, whereby a pecan orchard is ever in¬
creasing in value. And they grow for centuries!
We could cite many instances of marvelous investments in
pecans. Just a few typical ones may be found on Page 17. Pe¬
can trees have withstood the test of time, depression and the
elements, and many southern fortunes have been be¬
gun, and built, with these precious nuts.
Pecans Paid Better than Any
other Crops During the
Depression
PECANS proved to be the only crop during the
depression that paid well. You didn’t hear any
talk about plowing up the third row of pecans or
cutting down every third tree!
It is true that the growers didn’t get the price
they had been getting, but other things were low,
too — cotton, corn, wheat, hogs, etc. At the same time,
labor costs were lower— don’t forget that!
And remember this! All during that time, the
trees were growing, thus adding to their own pro¬
ductiveness and value for the forthcoming years,
and increasing the value of the land.
rnm, A. saia We’d rather grow pecans at 10c a pound than
One of our three-year-old trees cotton at 25c.
heavily loaded with blooms!
••<>11 - !!<>•• ••<>» - — - !<>••
“The 50 pecan trees bought from you ten years ago have been a blessing. They are now
bearing large pecans which I am selling at a good price.” — ROBT. deselle, cheneyville, la.
Bass Pecan Trees Will Bear and Pay You While You Live!
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WHAT is more beautiful and restful than a cool
shady pecan grove for life-long contentment?
Such a grove provides shade, bird life and peace — and
a steady income! PLANT A GROVE IN MEMORY
OF SOMEONE!
! NATURE’S TRUST FUND
A Living Memorial and
a Valuable Legacy to Leave Behind
AN ESTATE to leave your family and children (and future generations) is a
pecan grove. It is more valuable than actual gold. Stocks and bonds may fluc¬
tuate, and money may be quickly spent — so a fortune may be soon gone forever. But with
a pecan grove, growing all the time, and increasing in productiveness with age, there is
a regular income, like a trust fund, to insure revenue, college education, etc. Each year
the dividends grow larger.
So leave, as an heirloom, a pecan grove. At the same time it will prove to be a
living monument that will carry your name and foresight down through the ages!
••<>11 - - n<»-. ~<>'i - »<»•■
“ Your pecan trees had a very heavy crop this year. 1 gathered nearly 500 pounds. All
were well filled out. Your Stuart has no superior.” — HON. geo. b. Neville, meridian, miss.
5
Share The Wealth Program of Nature — With Pecans.
- 1<>- ••«>« - «<>-
We are Selling Happiness,
Income, Independence, Peace, Old Age Ease
OUR PECAN trees are only the means to the end. We are not seeking' to sell you
merely some trees, but to supply what those trees may mean for you and what they
can provide. We know by our own experience and that of thousands of our customers,
over a period of twenty-eight years, that our pecan trees may yield for you a steady
income, ultimate independence, retirement and happiness. And this applies not only
to your immediate family but for future generations as well.
How Pecans Fit In With Current Affairs
WE HEAR a lot of talk these days about Sharing the Wealth, but no legislation is
needed as long as there are pecans. These nuts are nuggets from Nature’s Gold
Mine and with them you can share in her storehouse of wealth.
Nor need you worry about an Old Age Pension, for with pecans you are assured in¬
dependence in your old age.
We hear a lot these days about Soil Control. A few pecan trees will do much to
prevent erosion. Also, planted in that gully already formed, these trees will add value
to otherwise worthless land.
You don’t have to worry about Unemployment Insurance when you can have
pecan trees working for you day and night. In just a few years you may be able to retire.
Cattle and pecans go hand in hand.
How You Can Profit
In This Aftermath
of the Depression
YOU may have some idle land or even
farm land which produces hardly
enough to pay taxes. It would pay you to
plant that land in pecans! The very minute
the land is planted in growing trees you will
have increased its value. Then the older the
trees, the more valuable the land. You could
do as we do here at Lumberton, not only
grow pecan trees, but crops between the
rows, along with fruits and berries, and
have livestock grazing among the trees.
It would even pay you to buy up cut¬
over or other idle land and plant it in pe¬
cans for resale. Land is cheap now and be¬
fore values increase you could make consid¬
erable money by following our suggestion.
Meanwhile, an additional source of revenue.
Your Land will Do
Double Duty
WHY devote a piece of land to just one
crop ? With pecans you can put your
land on a double shift. If you have grow¬
ing crops, pecan trees won’t interfere.
Even on land just set out with pecans,
crops can be planted between the rows.
Peas, beans, clover and other leguminous
crops will enrich the soil. Cotton, corn,
sweet potatoes, watermelons and all kinds
of truck, as well as strawberries and other
fruits may be grown. After the trees are
a few years old, cattle, hogs, mules, horses
and other livestock, which is the most prof¬
itable type of farming, can be handled.
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“My five year old trees are doing fine and have a right fair crop of nuts
this year.” — jos. a. j. Stanford, snow hill, md.
6
You Can Grow Your Old Age Pension With Pecans.
- — - --€>11 - - -
WITH such vigorous trees as ours
you, too, may be able to retire
early in life. For example, one of our
$1.00 trees, now produces over 240
pounds of nuts each season (see illus¬
tration, Page 10). What an invest¬
ment! Suppose you had a hundred
such trees!
With healthy, thrifty trees, bred-
up from early and heavy bearing par¬
ents, with our experience in selection
and inspection, dug by our experts —
all with a wonderful root system —
and our proper packing and shipping,
we know what our trees can do for
you. We know, too, what they have
done for others. With such fine trees
as we will ship you, you can rest as¬
sured of early production, and a vig¬
orous growth and increasing yield, if
the trees are properly cared for.
Then you can depend on a steadily
growing income, and in time, with a
grove of these fine trees you will be
able to retire, as others have done.
You Won’t Have
T o W ork or orry
all your life with
trees like these
This young tree, full of blooms, will be loaded
with nuts in the Fall
Create a College Fund with Pecans!
TD ECANS made it possible for our president and his brothers and sisters to attend
^ and complete college. Pecans are now putting three of the Bass children of the
present generation through college and two more will attend, there having been created
a special college fund for them. All this through the income from pecans.
This is therefore not simply theory nor a dream about possibilities. It is happen¬
ing constantly throughout the South and has affected our own children as it may
affect yours.
Create a college fund for your children with Pecans!
Make Pecans Your Hobby!
A BUSINESS man, banker or professional man needs an avocation — a hobby — “a
safety valve” to take his mind from his work. Perhaps you have idle land. Why
not plant it in pecans ? Then you’ll have something to interest you and at the same
time will reap a wonderful dividend each year, enough to allow for retirement. Better
than life insurance, considering an income for posterity. This is not merely a painted
picture of wealth. Facts are facts.
Perhaps you are a professional or business man, especially in the city, and your
hope is to retire some day in a quiet place in the country. Pecans may make it possible.
“It might interest you to know that I have just gathered 162 pounds fine Success pecans
from one of your U-5 ft- trees planted Nov. 1922” — w. A. elliott, brickeys, ark.
7
-€>'r
Bass Trees Usually Bear by the Third Year — Sometimes Before.
- )■<>•• -•€>11 - !<>•■
BASS BRED-UP TREES • • • Thousands of Our Pecan
Trees Bear Before Then Are Three Feet High - - -
Bass Pecan Trees are
Early Bearing and Heavy Bearing
Bred Up From Known Bearing Parents!
NOW listen to these superlatives but each one is true. The Bass pecan trees will live
better, grow faster, bear earlier, bear bigger and finer pecans, bear more heavily,
bring more money and sell more quickly than other nuts, not as good, and will prove to
be the cheapest in the end, all because they are the finest trees.
We, ourselves, have one among the largest groves in the entire country and
know exactly what our own trees will do. From these known bearing parents we breed
up our seedlings by taking buds and grafts from our early and heavy-bearing trees.
Many nurserymen take their buds and grafts from young nursery trees that have
never borne, so they do not know just what kind of parent tree they are from. But
with us, each tree from which we get our buds and grafts has a fine bearing record.
When you buy Bass trees you get pedigreed trees, so to speak!
And Here s Another Result of our superlative Trees:
“I am more than satisfied with the trees I bought from you six and seven years
ago. Every one has proved true to name, and I have gathered quite a few of them. They
are nicer and larger than any around this country anywhere. Some of them with the hull
on them were larger than the average hen egg. I sold some of my Stuart pecans for
35c per pound and will not have enough to supply the demand.” — Luke Hopkins, Bre-
mond, Texas, Oct. 28, 1935.
••€>« - »<>•• -€>!! -
“ The five acres planted in your pecans in 1930 exceeded my expectations. We got pecans
the second yean'. Some of the trees are higher than my house.”
THOS. B. DICKSON, PIEDMONT, S. C.
8
•€>IH
Compare Pecans to Cotton, Corn, Wheat, and Other Crops.
- »<>•• - -
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It Will Pay You To Plant
Only the Finest Trees
Why Take a Chance on "Bargains"?
YOU have much at stake when you plant pecan trees. If you buy what looks like a
bargain because the price is less, or from an agent who may be a perfect stranger
to you, you take a great chance. You won’t know whether those trees will live (or bear
if they do) until long after he has gone and until you may
have wasted several years of valuable growing time. When
you can buy Bass trees, you get proved early and heavy
bearing pedigreed stock, backed by guarantees that pro¬
tect you. (See Page 28.)
BASS TREES HAVE WELL DEVELOPED ROOT
SYSTEMS!
YOU are definitely assured well-developed roots, good,
strong, straight trunks and bred-up stock from
known bearing parents.
This typical Bass tree (see illustration), growing vig¬
orously in our Nursery, has a heavy foliage, a healthy
look, and is even bearing nuts. Note the root system — a
good hardy tap root with a fine spread of lateral roots.
Furthermore, we do not charge you for the roots, as some
do. Our trees are all measured from the ground up instead
of from the tip of the tap root to the top of the tree. Our
three-to-four-foot trees, therefore, are often as large as
others’ “five-to-six-foot trees”. You pay us for a smaller
sized tree, you see! See reference to pruning, Page 20.
Healthy, Hardy, Happy Trees Plus Careful Packing
AFTER good trees are grown
they must be treated with
kindness and not killed by careless¬
ness. Trees may be fine in the nur¬
sery, but when they reach you.
their roots may be dried out, or
they may have been bruised or
damaged in transit unless proper¬
ly packed and shipped. No other
nursery anywhere, packs trees as
we do! We dig deeper to get a
fine root system and then we pack
them carefully with damp moss.
The upper parts of the trees are
packed so as to protect them from
being skinned or bruised. The
roots of the trees are then wrapped in waterproof and airproof
paper to keep the moisture in and the air out, and are then
securely covered with burlap to keep out the sun, wind and air.
Such packing requires experts. Thus the trees are well protected
to reach you in excellent condition.
WARNING!
CALL for trees as soon as they arrive, as we pack them
to reach you in excellent condition if taken out im¬
mediately upon arrival. Inspect trees at the station, and re¬
fuse if in bad order, so we may make claim against railroad.
If any damage has been done in shipping, have agent write
on expi’ess receipt that they were damaged. Send us Damage
Receipt and we’ll promptly replace trees.
- - - ii<>- -c>ii - !i<>*
<o
£
A Bass bred-up tree, less
than three feet high, al¬
ready bearing pecans
Trees ready for
shipment.
“ Our pecans are doing wonderfully well. The three yeai' old trees have a good crop
considering their age. The nuts are enormous and hang in bunches of three, four and
five.” — PAUL H. STONE, ALAMOGORDO, NEW MEX.
9
Pecans and Cattle Produce A Ready, Steady Income.
Plant Once
For Always1.
Look at these
Beauties! Sixteen
nuts in this
cluster !
The World 's Largest Cluster of Stuart Pecans
THIS cluster of nuts is, in our opinion, the world’s largest cluster of Stuart pecans.
We have never been able to learn of a larger cluster of this variety.
This bunch of nuts was grown from one of our own trees, sold to a customer at
Purvis, Miss., the county seat of Lamar County.
There were sixteen nuts in this cluster. Compare the size of the bunch to the
hand holding them.
A Pecan Grove or Even a Few Trees
Is An Asset To Any Farm
EVERY farm should have a pecan grove to serve as insurance for later on and
provide a “reserve” for independence and old age. Or certainly each farm should
have at least a few trees. The nuts will furnish food for the family and friends and
also be a fine cash crop and bring in some
ready money. If these trees are planted
near the house they will insure lots of shade
and beautify the grounds, also attract the
birds. So if you don’t want to grow pecans
in a big way, even a few trees on your
place will prove to be a valuable asset.
This $1.00 Bass tree now produces over 240
pounds of nuts annually, with a steadily
increasing yield.
This Is Good
Farm Logic
PECAN trees will assure you a good
income. Should you have a short
crop you will be out virtually nothing,
for the trees are constantly growing and
will produce heavier the following year
so one doesn’t lose in the end. Trees
need occasional rest periods anyway. It
would be much better if we could control
their production — and then heavier crops
would be had the next season.
Each year your land becomes more
valuable with pecans, whereby with oth¬
er crops you will have been depleting
the soil!
..<>11 - "C>l - «<>••
“The trees arrived on time and in perfect condition and I am more than
pleased with them.” — w. E. conrad, Lexington, N. c.
10
Bass Trees Grow While You Sleep.
••«Jw - - «<»••
Bass trees planted one year, two years, three years and longer.
Drought, Flood, or Windstorms,
Prosperity or Depression —
Pecans Go On Forever!
DURING the recent drought, pecan trees were least affected. Though other crops
failed, pecans continued to produce. During floods, pecan trees have withstood the
surging waters better than any other tree.
Have you ever seen or heard of pecan trees being blown down ? In addition to
their use for shade, pecan trees are planted about a home since they don’t blow down
easily. These trees become deeply rooted and are able to hold on, during heaviest winds.
Nature seems to favor pecan trees, for we have record of them living for centuries.
More Nourishment in Pecans than Other Foods
THERE is more nutritive value in a pound of pecans than two pounds of pork chops,
three pounds of salmon, two and a half pounds of turkey or five pounds of veal.
Pecans are rapidly becoming recognized as a meat substitute. Thus a greater demand
and higher prices. Since it takes sometime to get into production of pecans, plant now
to be prepared for the growing demand on this great food crop.
Another of our groves with young pecan trees growing between the rows.
..c>i|- - — !l<> ••!!<>• - —
“I have ten pecan trees 1 bought from you several years ago and they have grown
wonderfully and are bearing nicely.” — dr. w. e. wofford, cartersville, ga.
11
Bass Pecan Trees Are Early Bearing !
..<>1 - ■ ■ ■ ■ ••<>11 -
- - u<»—
Bass Bred-Up
STUARTS
Are Big Producers
THE STUART is our first choice, and incidentally it is the most popular of the im¬
proved variety of pecans. This nut has been planted more extensively than any
other. The trees are vigorous, bear regularly, and resist scab. They are early and
heavy bearers. The nuts are large and well filled, the kernels being plump, with a meat
content of 49%, and of good flavor. Note the actual photographs of the inside of the
STUART pecan.
These nuts are the easiest to grow, sell well on the market, and bring a higher
market price. We recommend the Bass Bred-Up Stuarts, as the most profitable and
satisfactory of the pecan trees. We have an unusually fine stock of our large trees in
this variety — it would pay you to plant them in preference to others.
For Prices See Page 26.
Pecan Trees Planted By Washington
Are Still Bearing
JUST to show you how long pecan trees will live and grow — and bear — and to further
prove the foresight and wisdom of the Father of our Country, about the year
1785, and when George Washington lived at Mt. Vernon, he planted some pecan trees
which are still alive, in fine condition, and bearing. Washington was a wise man in
planting trees that were to become permanent.
• f '
“If I had my way I would straightway deed an acre of these magnificent,
generous food-bearing trees to every worthy, ambitious young man and woman
in this country. It would prove a solid foundation for life’s success — both as an
investment for pecuniary profit and an investment in health and happiness.”
— Said a Georgia Bank Director. t
••€>11 - !<>•• -<>11 - ll<>-
No orders for less than $5.00 — Please!
12
••€>lr
Bass Pecan Trees Are Heavy Bearers.
- !!<>•• ..<>11 - |<J.-
Bass Bred-Up SUCCESS
UR second choice is the SUCCESS Pecan, and a mighty popular variety, 40 to
45 to the pound. This tree is also an excellent grower, and heavy bearer in fertile
soil. It bears early, too. The nuts, as you can see, are large, though are not the largest,
but the kernel has proved to be the heaviest in a test of 14 varieties made recently.
The meat is plump, and of excellent flavor. The nut itself is ovate in form, has a thin
shell, and cracks easily. This variety does well in most sections, and the nuts bring a
high market price. The Bass Bred-Up SUCCESS Trees are among our biggest sellers
of our fine Papershell Pecan Trees. Plant our larger size trees and save that initial
growing period.
Plant Fruit Trees Between the Rows
See Pages 21, 22, 23, 24
The World's Largest Nursery Will Remain Such 1
OURS is not only the largest pecan nursery in the world but we believe we
have more fine young pecan trees growing than all other pecan nurserymen
put together. There are over 2,000,000 trees growing in our nursery at all times.
We intend to retain our title. During the depression, when some nurseries
didn’t even plant any trees or take care of the ones they had, we continued to
plant and cultivate as in normal times, regardless of the sale of trees. We were
building ahead and now that conditions are rapidly becoming normal, we still
have the kind we can sell you with a clear conscience and those which you may
buy with full confidence.
..<>■1 - - - - !<>•• - !«<»••
“1 have thirteen of your trees. 1 'inched as many as a bushel and a half from one tree
this fall. Am very much pleased with them — R. P. rawls, franklin, va.
13
Let Your Land Do Double Duty! Plant Fruits Between the Rows!
- - - !!<>•• ..€>11 - |l<>~
Pay Big Dividends
OUR third choice is the SCHLEY. This is also a popular nut on account of its thin
shell, excellent cracking- qualities, beautiful color, and unusual flavor, and the
market price is very satisfactory. The fact that we grow and sell this nut shows our
confidence and our recommendation.
In some localities, however, the SCHLEY has a tendency to scab a little, so before
purchasing this variety be sure that they grow in your section without this disease.
If so, you will find these to be profitable nuts; excellent and full nuts with 61% meat,
and a kernel that can be easily removed without breaking. The tree itself while an early
bearer is a slender grower — smaller than STUART or SUCCESS, and not quite as
hardy.
REPLACEMENTS
OF COURSE, we cannot say that every tree will grow, for all trees don’t grow, just
as all baby chicks you buy don’t grow; and, in fact, all babies don’t grow (most
do!). But should any of our No. 1 pecan trees fail to grow, we are willing to share the
loss, and will replace within one year, at half catalog price, any pecan trees that die,
where properly planted and oared for. The average nursery doesn’t replace any at all,
but this shows our confidence, and our willingness to aid even after the sale has been
made.
Let us suggest that you order our Extra Special size trees. The little difference
in price justifies the extra time you would have to wait for your trees to bear.
- ]!<>•• -.(>11 - ll<>"
No orders for less than $5.00 — Please!
14
Plant Pecan Trees On Your Idle Land. If You Sell, You Profit; If Not,
You Profit More!
..€>11 - !!<>•• ~<>l| - - -
All Bass Trees are Budded or Grafted
THESE two saucers of nuts show another reason why Bass trees are such sure and
heavy producers. Pecan trees have that natural tendency to revert back to the way
they were produced ages ago, and even a large pecan planted is almost certain to bear a
tiny nut later. Ordinarily, a nurseryman will plant these tiny nuts, depending upon
their buds or grafts to- produce the larger nuts.
In our nursery we plant the larger nuts, which cost us several times as much as
the smaller ones. We get the proper start for our trees assuring quality for you.
To produce large and profitable pecans, the young trees must be budded or grafted.
Some prefer the budded, and other the grafted, but each method is equally as valuable
and productive, and we do both. We do not buy buds or grafts from unknown sources,
but produce them ourselves from heavy bearing parents in our own orchards. There¬
fore, we know their history. We take the grafts and buds, not from prunings off nurs¬
ery stock, as is often customary, but from branches of our own bearing trees, thereby
causing us to lose thousands of pounds of nuts each year from our own crop.
Three Generations of Culture
IT TAKES years of training, cultivation, experiments and experience to produce thrifty
pecan trees. The Bass Nursery has behind it two generations, with a third ready to
carry on. These trees are a science and a life business with us. For 28 years we have
served the south, and trees sold even in our first year are now in great producing
groves.
Bass Trees Not Confined to the South !
“Have been buying pecan trees from various nurseries for the past five
years but have had rather bad luck in getting good trees. Have never bought
f from you because was afraid your trees grown too far South for this climate.
Have changed my mind since seeing the trees here you sold to W. M. Carruth of
this city. They are now heavy producers and the fruit is good quality.” — The
^ One Gallas Farmer, Cushing, Okla., Oct. 22, 1935.
7
..€>«— - !!<>•• -<>l| - »<>••
“We take this opportunity to testify as to the quality of your trees. In 1929 we set two
of the 7-ft. to large trees and they have been bearing now three years.”
— C. E. FONDAW, BARLOW, KY. ( Written in 1935.)
15
Plant Bass Pecans to Leave Your Family an Estate — a Practical Inheritance.
- — — - »<>•• ••<>11 - - -
-<>lh
“Pecans
Built My
Ho|ne.
They can
Biiild
Yours
Too!”
I. H. Bass
The home of I. H. Bass, shortly after a few pecan trees were planted. Note absence of shade.
Plant Bass Pecan Trees to Send Your Baby to College.
- -)!<>•• -.<>11 - - - jifr..
Eight years later. Note the growth of the trees and the improved appearance of the home.
How Pecan Trees Made
a House a Home
IT HAS been rightfully said that “it’s not a home until it’s planted.” Shrubbery cer¬
tainly adds life, beauty and “hominess” to one’s dwelling. The house on the left
is the way the home of our president looked before the pecan trees got big enough
to furnish shade. The photograph on the opposite page, although taken at a slightly
different angle, shows the same trees and how they provide considerable shade and
adorn the place and how much cooler it is now! You can tell that by the picture and
almost feel the breeze.
Visitors Welcome
—and a Most Unusual Proposition!
VISITORS are always welcome, and we have hundreds of them each year. We’ll
gladly take you over our place, show every operation and the many details of pre¬
caution in growing, grafting, budding, caring, packing and shipping our trees.
If you will visit us, in order to be sure about the trees you buy, and you do not
find our nursery to have more and better trees, we shall pay all expenses and liberally
for your time. You might thus care to visit around to make comparisons.
If we were not positive about our own trees, would we dare make such an offer?
Pecans have Paid Others Big Money
They Could Pay You, Too!
A COLORED farmer in Texas has av¬
eraged 800 pounds of nuts from one
tree bringing about $300 and as much
clear money as all the rest of his sandy
farm of 120 acres. He has refused $1000
for the tree. _
The tree shown on Page 10, planted
18 years before, produced $80 worth of
nuts in its 18th year alone, although it
started bearing the third year. Now the
tree produces more than 240 pounds each
year. It was one of our $1 trees.
A tree in San Saba, Texas, more than
1000 years old, it is claimed by tree ex¬
perts, produces an annual crop of from
$500 up to even $1000.
Twenty years ago an acquaintance
bought 5 acres of land for $20 per acre.
After planting in Bass trees he refused
the price of $1000 per acre a few years
later. _
A Mississippian got 200 pounds of nuts
from an 18-year-old tree, and another pro¬
duced 273 pounds one year on an 18-year-
old tree, and two years later 330 pounds
off the same tree.
It is said five dollars invested in 5 trees
produced in 18 years $6,336.41.
One of our customers bought two trees
for shade, and eight years later got 100
pounds of nuts off the two trees, selling
half of them for $25.
In Hollandale, Miss., there is a 38-
year-old tree that produced in one year
1200 pounds of nuts which sold for $480.
A woman customer wrote she would
not take less than $30,000 for her pecan
grove of Bass bred-up trees.
Numerous other instances of specific profits could be cited!
“Trees opened O.K. best packed lot of trees I ever saw come from any nursery .”
— E. D. RICHMOND, MEMPHIS, TENN.
- - - n<>- ..*>ii - n<>..
“I don't think 1 cotild have found a more honest and prompt company to deal with.”
— CARTERET, N. J.
16
17
Pecan Trees Withstand Heavy Winds and Flood.
..<$11! - 1110.. ..<>i| - !!<>••
To Answer Your Questions: —
How to Plant Pecan Trees
(We Recommend 12 Pecan Trees to the Acre).
TWO usual questions asked us are how many trees to plant to the acre, and what
kind of soil in which to plant them.
On land of only fair fertility, plant trees every 50 feet, but we generally recom¬
mend 60x60. If the ground is very rich, plant farther apart, such as 70x70, but for
the average, figure on every 60 feet — 12 trees to the acre. Please refer just below. You
can get more trees to the acre by the triangle method of planting (14 as against 12).
As to soils — land that will grow hickory or oak trees will grow fine pecans. It has
been well said that any land that will grow cotton will grow pecans. Well drained land
is needed for best results. Practically any average land in the South will grow fine
pecans.
The sooner you set out your pecan trees the better will be your prospects for them
living, the more vigorous will they grow up, and the earlier they will begin to bear. Set
out pecan trees as soon as possible after the leaves shed in the Fall, in November, De¬
cember, January, February or March. Even if you cannot set your trees early, book
your order now so we may reserve some of our finest trees for you.
Use a planting Board in setting your
trees. This is easily made by taking any
board or plank about six feet long and cut¬
ting a V-shaped groove in the center of it.
This groove in the planting board is made
to fit down over the stake you have driven
down in the ground where the tree is to be
planted. Then at each end of the planting board place a small peg. When you dig the
hole for the tree, all you will have to do is lay this planting board across the hole dug so
that each end will be against the pegs and your tree will come right in the groove
and be exactly in line. If you do not use a planting board it is hard to get trees in line
again after holes are dug, even if lined up exactly right to start with.
*
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3
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i 1 1 1 1 • i 1 1 ' i 1 1 ■ i • i 1 1
Square Method
To plant the square method, take
an ordinary L-square and place on
ground in order to get your lines
true. Sight and place a stake sixty
(preferably) feet away on each
line until you reach the ends of
the field. Then stake off on paral¬
lel lines at every sixty feet and
plant trees at each stake. Planting
sixty feet apart, you have 12 trees
to the acre.
Triangle Method
By planting the triangle method you get more
trees to the acre, and besides all trees are exactly
sixty feet apart in ALL directions. To get a true
equilateral triangle easily, drive a stake in the corner of
the field. Then with the aid of an L-square find stakes along
the outside lines. In order to get proper and exact distance
inward toward the field, get a wire sixty feet long. Attach
to stake. Get another wire of same length and attach to
next stake. Let one man make an arc with his wire, and
another man an arc with his. When the two wires meet,
properly taut, drive stake for tree. Work from that stake
and so on until field is covered.
..<$111 - !!<>•- ..€>11 - #<>••
Plant Fruit Trees Between the Rows. See Pages 21, 22, 23, 2Jf.
18
Pecan Trees Grow in Wet and Dry Season.
..cjlll - - - — - : -
Setting Pecan
and Fruit Trees RIGHT
Protect the Roots
Never allow the roots of the trees to become dry or exposed
to the atmosphere for any length of time from the time they
reach you until they are set in the ground.
Wet the bundle just as soon as you can and if not ready to
set out at once, dig a hole and put roots in and cover up well.
Place in a shady place if possible.
Set your trees at once upon arrival
or heel-in promptly as above.
Plant as Deep as in the Nursery
Set the tree about the same depth it stood in the nursery.
Fill in the hole with the best top soil, packing the dirt well
around the roots, especially the tap root. Keep the roots of the
trees out straight in their natural position and do not bend them
down by the tree.
Dig Large Holes — Protect the Roots
Have a large hole for your tree. Three feet wide and three
feet deep will not be too large for pecans. Holes about 12 inches
wide and one to two feet deep will do for fruit trees.
Mix thoroughly with the soil to be used to fill in the hole a
peck or half bushel of well-rotten manure or compost or some
good guano, being very careful not to allow it to come into
contact with the roots in ANY QUANTITY, for if it does it will
scald them and do more harm than good. . .
Fertilize Properly
If you desire to plant on land rather poor in fertility, thor¬
oughly mix with the soil two or three shovelsful of well-rotted
compost when you plant the tree, or one or two pounds of bone
meal. The best fertilizer after the tree is planted is to scatter
manure around the trees. The more the better — one-half to one
bushel to the tree, if possible. Do not bank it up around the
tree, but scatter it around for two or three feet. When it rains
the substance will be taken down to the roots. Put this around
your trees in the late winter, if possible, so that the trees will be able to get a fine
growth in the spring. When the trees are old enough to bear, use potash in some form
— wood ashes will do.
If Soil Is Dry
If the soil is dry when the trees are set, it is a good idea to
pour a bucketful of water to each tree when the hole is nearly
filled, and then fill the hole completely up.
Pour one bucketful of water to each tree once a week during
very dry spells in Summer. Make a basin-like hole at the base
of the tree. Pour water and as soon as it is soaked in good, fill
completely up with dry dirt. This holds in the moisture and also
keeps the ground from baking. If you cannot pull soil back,
covering the wet earth well, DO NOT water at all. Water poured
on top of the ground and left this way does more harm than good, as it causes the
earth about to bake and the tree to scald.
Cultivate for four to six feet around each tree thoroughly all during the Summer.
Never let grass or weeds grow up around your trees. Keep the ground dug up and soft
at all times.
..<>■1 - — - ><>•• ••«*«- — -
“While in Arkansas I bought two trees from your nursery, about twenty years ago.
They are the finest 1 have ever seen today.” — wichita, Kansas.
19
Around /ree.r
k
Set Tre£ Depth
It Sto od X/7 AJunsety
fJPPi
fjU
ill jj
MM
Rules for
If They’re Bass Trees — They’ll Produce.
..cjii, — - «<>- ••€>« - — - - n<>-
Cultivate the Ground
Cultivate for four to six feet around each tree thoroughly all
during the Summer. Pecan trees do best where the land is cul¬
tivated well. Our own experience has taught us that no tree re¬
sponds to care and cultivation better than the papershell pecan.
Frequent shallow cultivation is best. Keep the weeds and grass
down, for they take the moisture and nourishment needed bad¬
ly by the young growing pecan trees.
- - Special Notice About Fertilizer -
Recent experiments in our own orchards have shown us
that one pound of Nitrate of Soda or Sulphate of Ammonia
for each year the tree has been planted will be of great bene¬
fit and cause the trees to grow very fast. Merely spread it
around the trees for two or three feet and hoe or dig in well.
This can be done at any time from April 1st to last of June,
usually the earlier the better.
Care of Young Trees
No pruning is necessary after you once get the trees branch¬
ing high enough. The larger trees we sell will branch high
enough anyway, but the smaller trees have to have sprouts cut
off occasionally that come out on the body of the tree until the
branches get high enough. This may be done at any time re¬
quired, either summer or winter. We do not let our own pecan
trees start branching lower than shoulder high. They look better
and you can work around them where they are not allowed to
head too low.
Below Shoulder Hi^h-
Bass Trees Come Pruned, Ready to Plant
We endeavor to send out properly pruned trees, just as if we
were going to plant them ourselves, leaving the planter nothing
to do but to set them out. The taller grades of trees should be
top-trimmed, as it balances the top against unavoidable loss of
some roots when the tree is transplanted. Proper pruning in¬
sures the tree living and a good growth. Where trees are prop¬
erly pruned, handled and planted, there is no reason why any
of them should die. Our prices are made on the height of the
trees when dug. When properly top-trimmed, the height is
often materially reduced. Therefore if the height of a trimmed
tree, when received, is less than the catalog height, this is the explanation. We meas¬
ure our trees from the ground up and not from the top of the tap roots as many nur¬
serymen do. Our 3 to 4 feet trees are often as large as their “5 to 6 feet” trees — we
don’t charge for roots. You pay us for a smaller size tree. See Page 9.
Advice on Pecan Culture
Ask us all the questions you wish to in regard to pecan growing. We will gladly give you our
opinion. And as experts, let us advise you not to put off setting out your pecans. Remember the loss
of a year’s time in getting started means the loss of a year’s splendid income later on, at a time
when you may appreciate it most. And speaking of the time element, it would pay you to buy and
plant our larger trees, for you would save that initial growing period. Let Bass solve your pecan
problems.
For further information or definite instructions on Pecan growing, write the U. S. Dept, of Agri¬
culture, Washington, D. C., for free Farmers’ Bulletin Number 700, on “Pecan Culture,” and
Number 1501, on “Nut-Tree Propagation,” and other available bulletins on Pecans.
£
It will pay you to plant our Extra Special or large sizes for earlier
and heavier bearing. A better start. See prices on Page 26.
*
-•€>■» - ll<»-- ••€>11 - !■<>••
“ From three of your pecan trees, will get close to 200 pounds of nuts. This year the
pecans in this section ivere not filled out but mine were 98% good.”
— H. H. FELTMAN, MARSHALL, TEXAS.
20
Pecans Are Insurance! They Assure Independence In Old Age.
••C^l - - — _ _
You can Prosper with
Bass BLIGHT-PROOF
Pineapple Sand Pears
ANOTHER profitable fruit to grow,
and yet one which has not been suf¬
ficiently publicized to be more in demand,
is the Pineapple Sand Pears. We first
grew Pineapple Sand Pears for our own
use, and finding them of such prolific
growth, such fine fruit, such a ready
market, and such a splendid profit, we de¬
cided to pass on our experience to our
customers and grow these trees for them.
40 to 75 bushels per year from many of
the older trees in our section is nothing
unusual and some orchards yield over
1,000 bushels to the acre. One orchardist
produced 400 bushels on 2 Ms acres, one
year, and two years later gathered over
3,000 bushels which sold for $2,520 — over
$800 per acre.
Have you ever seen an orchard of
ears in bloom ? Was there anything more
eautiful than these graceful trees in
their mantle of white ? Even when the
blooms and fruit are gone, the trees are
ornamental as well as useful and will
beautify any home or land along a road¬
side. They take up but little room and re¬
quire no cultivation.
One of our beautiful Blight-Proof Pine¬
apple Pear orchards in full bloom.
-
Branches of our Blight-Proof Pineapple Pears
loaded to capacity.
SO WE NOW produce these pear trees for our
customers, and have thousands of young,
thrifty growing trees ready for shipment. These
trees, when mature, will be better than our own
old trees, since they have been propagated from
our producing trees; thus fine parent stock, and
a better start than our own trees had.
The Bass Pineapple Sand Pears grow rapid¬
ly — they are extremely hardy. All trees have a
well developed root system.
We suggest that you plant our Extra Special
size, so beautifully headed.
GUARANTEE
The Bass Pineapple Sand Pears are guar¬
anteed not to blight in any section.
PINEAPPLE SAND PEARS
Each
10
100
3 to 4 feet .
...$ .45
$ 4.00
$ 30.00
4 to 5 feet .
... .55
5.00
40.00
5 to 6 feet .
... .70
6.00
50.00
6 to 7 feet .
... .90
7.00
60.00
Large size .
... 1.15
10.00
75.00
Extra Special size...
... 1.50
12.50
100.00
ji<>- -
- !!<>••
“My trees are very pretty and paying dividends. They were planted in January, 1928.
I am one more satisfied customer and a booster for Bass pecans .” WETUMKA, okla.
21
Let Pecans Be Your Hobby! A Profitable One, Too!
••€>11 - - - •]!<»•• -€>H - !■<>••
Why We Sell Fruit Trees, Too
BECAUSE we were asked so often to recommend or buy fruit
trees for our customers who wanted to plant them along
with pecans— or otherwise — we decided for their accommodation
to handle a few fruits. This is good, strong, hardy stock, with
well-developed root systems. We can relieve you of much trouble and extra ex¬
pense if you order fruit trees along with pecans. The selection may be left to
our judgment. Write for SPECIAL PRICES ON LARGE QUANTITIES.
Japanese Persimmons
THE JAPANESE PERSIMMON can be grown on as wide a
range of soil as the native Persimmons, and will succeed
the minimum care and attention. The trees are vigorous,
prolific, and have few enemies. As the fruit keeps and ships well,
it can be placed on the market in good condition. It meets with
ready sale.
We recommend the TANE-NASHI variety. In high favor. Large fruit, flesh
yellow and seedless. Vigorous, prolific ; uniform size — most desirable to market.
Each 10
3 to 4 feet . $ .50 $4.50
4 to 5 feet . 60 5.00
"pi Because of our care in inspecting, packing and shipping, and
* the huge expense to which we are put, it hurts to fill orders that
amount to less than $5.00. So please order enough, even for friends, to make at
least that much of an order. However, we will fill your order amounting to less
than $5.00 if you cannot increase it, rather than disappoint you.
Plums
RED JUNE. Early market plum, large size, deep
vermilion red color. Good variety, very firm.
Flesh light yellow. Free from rot. Very heavy bear¬
er and easy to grow. A wonderful plum, in our es¬
timation.
Each 10 100
3 to 4 feet . $ .50 $4.50 $30.00
4 to 5 feet . 65 6.00 40.00
..t>l!!l£>«
Let your land do double duty — Plant Pecan Trees
between the rows.
..C>llll<3«>
BASS GUARANTEE ON FRUITS SS
of our fruit trees and
plants are supplied by
reputable nurseries. We guarantee them to be true to name, high in quality, good healthy stock, free from
disease. Stock damaged in transit, if notified immediately, will be replaced, if express or freight receipt
indicates damage. Should any stock prove not true to name, we will return money or replace it with our
other stock, but are not liable for any damages beyond this.
NOTICE. If your order calls for a variety we do not have on hand, we shall, unless advised to the
contrary, substitute another which should prove as satisfactory. Thus we save you disappointment and
loss of time. Ask for our special prices on large orders.
..C>l!ll<>-
It takes as much land, time, handling and experience, on “sorry” trees as it does
on Bass Trees. The only savings you make if you buy so-called cheaper trees is in buy¬
ing. But you may be wasting time, effort and money in not getting the finest trees to
start with.
WE BELIEVE that our prices offered are low, considering our early and heavy
bearing pedigreed trees and that their quality merits your confidence. We will
not compete with so-called “cheap trees” offered by itinerant agents. You may feel that
you are paying us a little more but you will be getting more, and if something should
be wrong you will know where you can reach us, so we can make it right.
..t>l| - lll$>~ ..t>i! -
“I have ordered trees from you for the last 15 years. I have never been
disappointed — they are everything you claim for them."
JNO. W. TISDALE, CLARKSVILLE, VA.
22
No One Is Complaining About The Pecan Crop!
Peaches
WE need not elaborate on the eatability and
marketability of Peaches. Plant this profit¬
able fruit between the rows of your pecan or¬
chard or in your garden.
RED BIRD. Very early, hardy grower, good
bearer; has large fruit of bright glowing color
and splendid quality. Ripens last of May or early
June. Cling.
HILEY BELLE. Very rapid grower, prolific
bearer, with a fresh, firm, excellent creamy white
flesh and real peach flavor. Ripens in June. Free¬
stone.
ELBERTA. Large, yellow, with red cheeks;
juicy and of good flavor; flesh yellow. Ripens
middle of July. This is an excellent shipping va¬
riety. Freestone.
PRICES— ALL VARIETIES
Big Fruit Tree Shortage This Year. May
Have to substitute in Peaches and Apples.
Each
10
100
June buds 1 to 2 feet .
. $ .20
$1.50
$12.50
3 to 4 feet .
. 30
2.50
20.00
4 to 5 feet .
. 60
5.00
35.00
3 to 4 feet.
4 to 5 feet.
Apples
RED JUNE. A choice fruit of a well-known
variety — medium conical; deep red; juicy.
Very productive.
DELICIOUS. No new variety gained popu¬
larity in so many different sections so quickly.
Fruit large, nearly covered with brilliant dark red; flesh
fine grained ; crisp, melting, juicy, with delightful aroma ;
highest Quality. Splendid keeper and shipper. Tree one of
hardiest, vigorous grower, with good foliage. Regular an¬
nual bearer.
Each 10 100
. $ .30 $2.50 $20.00
. 60 5.00 35.00
Bass Grapes
GROW your own Grapes for the table or your own
grape juice, wine, or jelly.
CONCORD. The most widely grown, most popular of all grapes, for
vineyards. Black. Healthy, hardy, vigorous vine, large bunch and berry,
and a good yielder. Grows quickly. Our Concords this year are extra
fine.
NIAGARA. Leading white grape. Widely planted. Bunch large ;
handsome, juicy and fine flavor.
2-Year Each 10 100 1000
No. 1 . $ .25 $2.00 $15.00 $100.00
Bass Figs
THE fig-canning industry is gradually extending
throughout the South. Since several tons of figs
can be produced on an acre of ground, it is profitable to
give them intensive culture. The fresh fig is quickly find¬
ing its way into market, and meeting with ready sale.
Figs require little or no cultivation. Our favorite is the CELESTE,
one of the hardiest varieties. Very desirable for canning and preserv¬
ing. Small to medium, pear-shaped, ribbed. Flesh firm, juicy, sweet,
excellent quality.
Each 10 100
3 to 4 feet . $ .35 $3.00 $20.00
4 to 5 feet . 50 4.50 35.00
..€>« - — - n<*— ••«> -
“ The trees arrived this morning and they are all beautiful specimens and shipped in
perfect condition. If they do not do wonderfully it will be entirely my fault.”
— CARL LAY, GADSDEN, ALA.
23
An Income for Life from Bass Pecans.
Here’s a Crop that Brings in the Cream
THERE is nothing like having strawberries growing about the home for pleasure
and PROFIT. Besides home use and the market for strawberry preserves, the
sale of strawberries themselves is enormous. Whole communities have been built by
their profits. On one acre, an Arkansas man made $422.80 net. One farmer made more
than $5,000 net on 17 acres. A Mississippi county sold $80,000 worth of berries from
140 acres, netting each farmer an average of $571 per acre. And so on.
Grow berries for your own use or for market. Set out 16 to 18 inches apart in 3 Ms
foot rows. It wrill require about 7,500 plants per acre — and will pay you to follow these
planting instructions. Ours are healthy plants with good established root systems. We
ship plants from October 15th to April 1st, from our grower in Tennessee or Arkansas.
The New Blakemore Strawberry
This is a new berry that has been recommended highly by the Department of
Agriculture at Washington, D. C. It is claimed that ninety per cent of the fruit will run
as No. l’s. The Blakemore is firm, well colored, deliciously flavored — very productive
and marketable fruit.
Mastodon Improved Klondike
EVERBEARING. This is the finest ever-
bearing strawberry. New large fall-bearing
berry. Mammoth berries. Eighteen of the
larger ones fill a quart. Big strong plants.
Firm berries, highly flavored, very sweet.
Most productive and profitable of all ever-
bearers. We recommend them above all
everbearers.
This variety is planted more in the
southwest than any one variety grown to¬
day. Season is second early, and the Im¬
proved Klondike is bred up and is more
productive than the old original Klondike.
KS-
POST PAID
££• EXPRESS COLLECT “Si
25
50
100
250
500
1000
5,000
10,000
Imp. Klondike
. $ .60
$ .75
$1.25
$1.50
$2.50
$ 3.50
$13.50
$ 25.00
Blakemore .
. 75
1.00
2.00
3.00
5.00
9.00
40.00
75.00
Mastodon .
. 1.00
1.75
3.00
4.00
7.50
15.00
65.00
125.00
Youngberries
HERE’S a unique berry that is becoming most popular. It is a cross between a Logan¬
berry and a Dewberry. This berry is remarkable for its dessert, beverage, preserv¬
ing and cooking qualities. Fruit is large, deep wine-color, sweet, juicy. The plants are
vigorous, propagate freely and resist disease. The U. S. Department of Agriculture
recommends this variety. Keep up with the times and plant Youngberries for the in-
creasing xxiarket. We grow our own Youngberries for our customers.
Single lots .
. 25c
each
50 plants .
. 15c
each
10 plants .
••<}m -
. 20c
each
l<>-
100 plants . .
..An -
. 10c
each
— 1<>-
“/ received the trees. They came well wrapped, in fact, I’ve never seen trees and plants
better wrapped and preserved than the ones you shipped me.”
— RAYMOND L. ROACH, SARDIS, MISS.
24
Pecan Trees Live For Centuries!
•*«>■ - '<>•• ~<># - — -
Other Bass Services:
- Large Orchard Planting -
We are in position to not only sell you our choice bred-up trees, but to set out and
care for large orchards by our own experts. Thus a positive assurance of not only good
trees, but the attention they need to get a good start. Write us for our very reasonable
terms.
- Tree Topping— -
Poor trees are high at any price. Many have bought them elsewhere that won’t
bear a nut, and we’ve had to come in to save the wreck by tree-topping and budding with
our bred-up stock.
Top-grafting and budding is a special craft and we are prepared to perform this
service, going anywhere to rejuvenate non-bearing orchards, provided there is a large
number of trees to topwork.
- Pecan Buds and Grafts for Sale -
THOUSANDS of grafts and buds are cut and sold by us each year from our early and
heavy bearing pecan trees. Do not top-work your trees with poor scions — insure
success in your work with our buds, grafts, and prepared wax. Grafts furnished dur¬
ing December, January, February and March not kept on cold storage are $2.00 per
100, or $15.00 per 1,000. In lots of 5,000 and up at $10.00 per 1,000. Cold storage
grafts kept for late top-working in April, May and June are $3.00 per 100, or $25.00
per 1,000. Buds furnished during July, August and September are $1.50 per 100
or $10.00 per 1,000. Varieties are Stuart, Success, Schley, Bass Papershell, Nelson,
Hale, Frotscher’s Eggshell, Pabst, Dependable, Moneymaker. No less than 100 of a kind
sold.
Prepared Wax, ready to use, 50c per pound.
We Have 15,000 Acres of Fine Land For Sale
Here at Lumberton, where pecan growing conditions are so ideal, we have for sale
15,000 acres of fine land. This land is well located — lots of it right along gravel high¬
ways that are soon to be concreted at no extra cost to the landowner. It is extra fine
land for Papershell pecans, peaches, pears, plums, grapes, figs, Satsuma oranges, all
kinds of early and late vegetables and truck growing, and also excellent land for cot¬
ton, corn, peas, beans and other farm crops. This is a wonderful climate, being warmed
in the winter by a breeze from the warm Gulf stream and cooled in the summer by
light winds most all the time. No finer section can be found for cattle, sheep and horse
grazing — ample rainfall to make grasses grow fast and stay tender. Green feed for
stock can be had every day in the year. Health conditions are unusually fine — Lamar
County ranking right among the healthiest counties in the United States. Fine schools,
churches, good gravel roads, good citizens and as fine water as you can find in the
country — water is pure, odorless, tasteless and clear and soft — most ideal. This land
is cheap — priced at from $5.00 to $15.00 per acre for uncleared land. This land is easy
to clear — usually costing from $5.00 to $10.00 per acre. Easy terms are offered by us.
If You Have Land For Sale
Perhaps you have land that you want to sell. Plant it in pecan trees ! You will immediately
increase the value of your land and, anyway, make it more salable. Twenty years ago a person
of our acquaintance bought five acres of land at $20.00 per acre. A few years later he planted
the land in Bass trees and was offered $1,000 per acre, which price was refused. He realized that
by planting pecan trees he had increased the value of his land by $950 per acre, for he could have
got only $50 an acre for the land as he bought it. His land, taxes, and trees were readily paid for
in the actual increased value, and it was worth a big difference besides.
“/ received the pecan trees. They are the finest trees I have ever seen for the price
paid. My neighbors ordered some elsewhere and paid $1.25 each; they are just switches
compared to mine.” — mrs. earl brooks, lagrange, ga.
25
There's An Increasing Market for Pecans.
- n<>*- -
PRICES
Top-Grade (No.
1) Pecan Trees
— All Varieties
Each
Six
Twelve
Sixty
100
1000
2-3 Feet .
.$ .80
$ 4.20
$ 7.80
$ 36.00
$ 60.00
$ 500.00
3-4 Feet .
. .90
5.10
9.60
45.00
70.00
600.00
4-5 Feet .
. 1.00
5.70
10.80
51.00
80.00
700.00
5-6 Feet .
. 1.20
6.90
13.20
60.00
100.00
900.00
6-7 Feet .
. 1.35
7.80
15.00
72.00
120.00
960.00
7 Feet to Large .
. 2.00
10.80
19.80
90.00
150.00
1200.00
Large .
. 2.50
14.40
27.00
120.00
200.00
1600.00
Extra Large .
. 3.50
20.40
36.00
165.00
275.00
2200.00
Extra Special .
. 4.00
22.80
42.00
195.00
325.00
2600.00
We recommend
the planting of our
large trees.
They bear
earlier.
Special Price on Large Orders
One to five trees take the each rate price ; six to eleven trees take the six rate price,
twelve to forty-nine take the twelve rate price ; fifty and up take the one hundred rate price ; 500
and up take the 1,000 rate price. Special prices cheerfully quoted on larger lots.
All Prices F. O. B. Lumberton, Miss. ^
For prices on Bass Pecan buds, grafts and prepared wax, see page 25.
PLUM — RED JUNE FIGS
Each
10
100
Each 10
100
3 to 4 feet .
. $ .50
$4.50
$30.00
3 to 4
feet .
. $ .35 $3.00
$20.00
4 to 5 feet .
. 65
6.00
40.00
4 to 5
feet .
. 50 4.50
35.00
PEACHES
GRAPES
All Varieties
Both Varieties
Each
10
100
2-Year
Each
10 100
1,000
June buds 1 to 2 feet $ .20
$1.50
$12.50
No. 1.
. $ .25 $2.00 $15.00
$100.00
3 to 4 feet .
. 30
2.50
20.00
4 to 5 feet .
. 60
5.00
35.00
JAPANESE PERSIMMONS
PINEAPPLE SAND
PEARS
3 to 4 feet .
Each
. $ .50
10
$4.50
Each
10
100
4 to 5 feet .
. 60
5.00
3 to 4 feet .
. $ .45
$ 4.00
$30.00
4 to 5 feet .
. 55
5.00
40.00
APPLES
5 to 6 feet .
. 70
6.00
50.00
All Varieties
6 to 7 feet .
. 90
7.00
60.00
Each 10
100
Large size .
. 1.15
10.00
75.00
3 to 4
feet .
. $ .30 $2.50
$20.00
Extra Special size.... 1.50
12.50
100.00
4 to 5
feet .
. 60 5.00
35.00
STRAWBERRIES
ssr
POST PAID
£3" EXPRESS COLLECT
25
50
100
250
500
1000 5000
10,000
Imp. Klondike
. $ .60
$ .75
$1.25
$1.50
$2.50
$ 3.50 $13.50
$ 25.00
Blakemore .
. 75
1.00
2.00
3.00
5.00
9.00 40.00
75.00
Mastodon .
. 1.00
1.75
3.00
4.00
7.50
15.00 65.00
125.00
YOUNGBERRIES
Single Plants . 25c each
10 plants . 20c each
50 plants
100 plants
15c each
10c each
We urge you not to wait until the last minute to order, as many people do, and
after our better trees have been selected. Place an order now for shipment later.
If you want to plant your trees on a holiday or week-end, we can time the shipment to
reach you then.
••tjiih
26
- !!<»•• ..<>11 -
“The trees came in good condition. Such nice large trees.”
MRS. E. A. MEWBORN, MACON, TENN.
It’s advisable to plant our larger trees — You save the initial growing period.
•••}« - - - ii<»-- ..<>ii - — _ _ _
SWTLEASE MAKE YOUR ORDER FOR $5.00 OR MORE IF POSSIBLE-**
ORDER BLANK
TO
BASS PECAN COMPANY
Largest Pecan Nursery in the World
LUMBERTON, MISSISSIPPI
For prices, see page 26 and for complete descriptions, please refer to the following pages
Pecans . pP > ip
Pears . Pa; 21
Japanese Persimmons . Page 22
Grapes . pfl{rp 23
Plums . Pagt 22
Peaches . Page 23
Apples . Page 23
Figs . Page 23
Strawberries . Page 24
Youngberries . Page 24
KIND
QUANTITY
SIZE
PRICE
PECANS
Stuart .
Success .
Schley .
PEARS
Pineapple Sand Pear .
PLUMS
Red June .
JAPANESE PERSIMMONS
Tane-Nashi .
PEACHES
Red Bird .
Hiley Belle .
Elberta .
FIGS
Celeste .
APPLES
Red June .
Delicious .
GRAPES
Concord .
Niagara .
STRAWBERRIES
Blakemore .
Improved Klondike .
Mastodon Everbearing..
YOUNGBERRIES .
Pecan Buds .
Pecan Grafts .
Prepared Wax .
SEE OPPOSITE PAGE FOR PRICES — Also Terms and Conditions of Sale (Page 30)
Total Amount of Bill .
I Guarantee to Take This Order and Pay For It.
Signed . . .
Post Office .
Express Office .
Date to Ship .
••<># - «<>•• - «<>••
“The shipment reached me in first class condition and such fine trees they are. I feel 1
did the right thing by purchasing them from you” — L. T. corell, Portsmouth, va.
27
Good Things Cost Less Than Bad Ones. — Italian Proverb.
- !<>•• .<>1 - - - !!<>»•
All our BRED'UP Pecan Trees are absolutely guaran
to be true to variety, strong, thrifty, vigorous, well dug,
packed and to reach you in excellent condition, if ta\en
immediately upon arrival, or we'll replace the trees, prov:
complaint is made with Railroad Agent. Inspect trees
station.
We further guarantee upon satisfactory proof that if
pecan tree we sell you does not prove true to variety,
refund promptly in cash FIVE TIMES the amount paid.
BASS PECAN COMPANY. Ll’MBERTON, MISSISSIPPt
These Guarantees Fully Protect You
IT’S EASY for anyone to make any guarantee, but have you assurance that the guar¬
antee will be earned out? No other nursery has dared duplicate our guarantee
above or any of our other guarantees or propositions listed on this page. It pays to
deal with the largest Pecan Nursery in the world.
SHOULD any of our No. 1 pecan trees
die wfithin one year — if properly cared
for — we’ll share the loss with you and re¬
place the trees for one-half the regular
catalog prices.
If you’re in doubt as to the quality of
our trees, we’ll ship them to you in com¬
petition with any others and allow you
to select the trees with the finest developed
root systems. Does anybody else have such
confidence in their trees'? WE KNOW
OUR TREES AND THOSE OF OTHERS.
If you will visit us, especially in order
to be sure about the trees you buy, we
shall pay all expenses and pay you lib¬
erally for your time if you do not find
our nursery to have more and better pe¬
can trees than any nursery anywhere. You
might care to visit around to make com¬
parisons.
If we were not positive about our own
trees, would we dare to make such an
offer ?
Our Pineapple Sand Pears are posi¬
tively blight-proof. They are guaranteed
not to blight in any section.
We grow most all our fruit trees, but
some are supplied by reputable nurseries.
We guarantee them all to be true to name,
high in quality, good healthy stock, free
from disease. Stock damaged in transit,
if notified immediately, will be replaced,
if express or freight receipt indicates
damages. Should any stock prove not true
to name we will return money or replace
it with other stock, but are not liable for
damages beyond this.
REFERENCES: Dun or Bradstreet;
Lamar County Bank, Purvis, Miss.; First
National Bank of Hattiesburg, Miss., and
thousands of our customers.
WARNING
FOR YOUR sake, beware of the nurseryman who calls at your door with a truckload
of pecan trees for sale and offers to plant them for you. Sun and wind quickly dry
out roots, and trees in trucks, unprotected, also previously half dug and poorly packed,
are often dead before they are set in the ground. Don’t lose that money and the time
in waiting for them to grow.
Ask that traveling agent if he will make the same written guarantee that we do;
then ask yourself if there is a firm back of him that will make the guarantee good.
Suppose the guarantee is made good, what about the five years you have wasted to
learn your mistake, and what insurance have you that the new trees will be any better ?
Why take the chance ?
- ii<j- — «>ii - n<»..
“About ten years ago I purchased some Success pecan trees from you. They have borne
fruit for several years — they are simply fine." — MRS. ORA Robinson, lake, miss.
28
An INSTITUTION To Serve You!
A Cheap Purchase is Money Lost. — Japanese Proverb.
••<>11 - - - !!<>•• -«<>ii - —
OUR SOLE business, which has been our life’s work, is the growing and selling of
pecan trees. It requires our attention 365 days a year. This is not a company which
buys trees each year for resale, or sends out agents to peddle them, but a large organ¬
ization operating throughout the year, and selling our own trees direct to the custom¬
er and for cash only. Nor is it a one-man, one-truck concern, nor a backyard “nursery”.
This nursery comprises 15,000 acres, of which 1,000 is planted in orchards and nurseries,
and in which over 2,000,000 trees are growing at all times.
From 50 to 100 men are employed the year round, many of whom have been with
us since we began business. They live jn their own homes, which we furnish, and are
happy, contented labor, who take pride in our trees and whose hearts are in their work.
Thirty mule teams and all kinds of farm machinery are used on our place.
Each Tree Individually Inspected
BELOW is a familiar scene. The man in the foreground does nothing but inspect
trees. This official inspector is a trained and expert nurseryman, and it is his job
not to let a single tree pass that is in any way inferior, defective in root system or trunk.
The trees are first placed in the vat of water to wash the dirt off the roots, so they
may be inspected and properly packed for shipment. The other men gather and tie
the trees carefully, packing as described on page 9. As the trees are growing the
entire nursery is inspected every week. The inspection is daily, but it requires a week
to walk through all the rows of all the fields. Trees are carefully watched to keep free
of any pests and diseases, and to see that they are in fine growing condition.
Each tree individually inspected. Imperfect trees are thrown out AND BURNED.
-<>ii - — - ..<> - -
“I want to thank you for sending me such fine trees and filling my order so promptly.”
— POPLAR BLUFF, MO.
Our office building.
Notice the pecan trees.
29
Bass Pecan Trees Budded or Grafted From Known Parents.
u<>~ -.tjni -
A truck load of
fine papershell pe¬
cans from our
own orchards.
Is There a Market for Pecans? Always!
THE MOST popular nuts are pecans. Because growers realize that the market has
hardly been scratched, cooperative associations have been formed to further their
sale. Pecans have sold on their own merits because of their delightful taste and flavor,
and food value. There is no telling what the demand will be when they are advertised.
But regardless of the future market, the immediate consumption is enormous.
Confectioners, Hullers and Salters use them by the carload. Fruit cakes, so popular
in the Fall, require tons. Bakeries use them all year round. Cracking companies — and
by the way, that is a comparatively new industry which can be carried on in the home —
cannot always secure enough nuts. Chain and grocery stores sell them. Pecans and
Pecan Pralines may be advertised and sold by mail from the home.
So there is already a tremendous and ever increasing market for pecans, and the
industry is yet in its infancy! Grow along with it as the consumption increases.
Papershell Pecans For Sale!
OUR OWN pecan groves produce thousands of pounds of papershell pecans
each season which we offer for sale. Prices are as follows : 5-pound box
of fine Papershell nuts delivered by Parcel Post, $2.50 ; 10-pound box as above
$4.00, and 100 pounds delivered by express, $30,00 prepaid.
Terms and Conditions of Sale
Terms Are Cash With Order. We pay spot
cash for everything and sell the same way. It
saves us a lot of bookkeeping and annoyance
and enables us to sell our high-grade, bred-up
trees cheaper. Some prefer to have goods sent
C. O. D., but why pay that extra collection fee?
Why not send money with order ? Prices are
F. O. B. Lumberton, unless otherwise stated.
How to Send Money. Send money any way
that is most convenient for you. Why not send
the money and save the C. O. D. fee? We pre¬
fer money order.
We cannot ship trees by mail except small¬
est pecans and fruits.
Our Shipping Facilities are exceptionally good.
We are near the depots of two railroads and
have open stations both day and night. Also
have long distance telephone and telegraph ser¬
vice at all times. You can get us over telephone
any time.
Our Trees Always Freshly Dug. We can dig
and ship your trees any day.
Order Early. The demand for our high-grade,
bred-up trees far exceeds the supply, and it is
very imperative that you send in your order
early. Those who order early naturally receive
the choicest stock.
Time of Shipment. Unless otherwise instruct¬
ed, orders received during the shipping season,
November 1st to April 1st, will be forwarded as
soon as possible after receipt of the order.
Substitution. If out of the varieties ordered,
we will send the ones we think to be the equal
or superior unless instructed not to substitute.
No Charge for Packing. We carefully pack
and tag all trees free of charge.
Our Trees Free of Disease. A certificate of
inspection of the Mississippi State Entomologist
certifying our trees to be free of disease ac¬
companies each bundle of trees. All inspection
laws of other States are complied with.
We are not connected with any other nursery. We do not employ agents.
..<Jp| - »<>•• -t>il - »$»••
“Two or three of the pecan trees purchased of you in 1921 ( Stuart variety) are
breaking down with fruit.” — itta bena, miss.
30
BASS TREES
Hold World Record!
This is the remarkable bearing record of
nine of our Extra Special pecan trees set
out the last of February, 1923, by Dr. D. B.
Stevenson, of Lumberton, Miss. Most all of
these trees bore pecans the first year set
out. They were our largest size trees and
have been given the very best of attention
by Dr. Stevenson. He has fertilized the trees
very heavily with barnyard manure and
worked around them often, so that weeds
and grass would not get the fertilizer. Re¬
sults have been remarkable.
1 The record that follows was carefully
kept by Dr. Stevenson, who is one of the
best known physicians as well as loved and
respected citizens of South Mississippi, and
is absolutely authentic as he gathered and
weighed the pecans himself. The trees bear¬
ing the heaviest crops were the ones most
favorably located. Trees with smallest
yields were greatly handicapped by being
near big oaks, sidewalks, etc. The nuts
were gathered in October and November
of 1925 — actually before the trees had been
set in the ground three years.
Yield
25 y2 lbs.
15
16
17 y2 “
28% “
12
Trees No.
1 Bass Papershell
Age
2 years 8 mos.
2 years 8 mos.
2 years 8 mos.
2 years 8 mos.
2 years 8 mos.
2 years 8 mos.
2 years 8 mos.
2 years 8 mos.
2 years 8 mos.
6 Nelson
Plant our Extra Special Sizes for Earlier
and Heavier Bearing!
CATALOG DESIGNED AND PREPARED BY H ARVEY- M ASSENG ALE CO., INC., ATLANTA, GA.
PRINTED IN U. S. A. BY DITTLER BROS., ATLANTA, GA.
i t i t t » r
Grow Your Own
Old-Age
Pension !
Share the Wealth
Program
of Nature!
Pecans and Cattle Produce a Ready and Steady Income,
They let your Land Do Double Duty,
and Eliminate Soil Erosion!
“ CThe Hardest Pecan Wursery in the World”
Lumberton -Mississippi