380 Peach-Growing 



mixon Cling, Oldmixon Free, Onderdonk, Opulent, Orange 

 Cling, Oriole. 



Palestine, Pallas, Palls, Palmerston, Patterson, Peak, Pearce, 

 Peen-to, Peerless, Pendleton, Peregrine, Perfection, Plant, 

 Phillips, Picquet, Pineapple, Pond, Powers, Preston, Prince of 

 Wales, Prolific. 



Raisin, Ray, Red Rareripe, Red Cheek, Red River, Reeves, 

 Rex, Richards, Ringgold, Rivers, Robert, Robins, Rochester, 

 Rogers, Royal George, Ruding, Runyon, Rupley, Russell. 



Sabichi Winter, St. John, Sallie Worrell, Salwey, Schumaker, 

 Sea Eagle, Sellers, Shamrock, Sims, Sims Cling, Skinner, 

 Slappey, Sleeper, Smith, Smith Cling, Smithson, Sneed, Snow 

 Cling, Snow Orange, Steadley, Stearns, Stinson, Stonewall, 

 Strawberry, Strout, Stump, Suber, Success, Summer Heath, 

 Summerour, Sunrise, Superb, Susquehanna, Swan, Sylphide. 



Taber, Tarbell, Texan, Texas, Thurber, Tibout, Tillotson, 

 Tippecanoe, Tornado, Triana, Troth, Triumph, Tryon, Tus- 

 kena, Twenty Ounce. 



Van Buren, Van Deman, Victor, Victoria. 



Waddell, Wager, Waldo, Waller, W^alker, Walton, Ward, 

 Washington, Waterloo, Weed, Wellington, Wheatland, Whit- 

 ford, Wilbur, Wilkins, Willett, Wine, Winifred, Wonderful, 

 Worlds Fair, Worth, Wright. 



Yellow Hall, Yellow Rareripe, Yates, Yellow Swan. 



Zip. 



BOTANY OF THE PEACH 



The peach has been known to botanists under various 

 names, depending mostly on the genus to which it is referred. 

 Linnaeus, in 1753, placed it in the genus Amygdalus, calling 

 the species Amygdalus Persica. Fifteen years later Philip 

 Miller placed it in the separate genus Persica, under the name 

 P. vulgaris. Most botanists, however, have preferred to 

 include it in the genus Prunus, with the plums and apricots ; 



