Twentieth Century Fruits 13 



New Plumcot— The "Triumph" 



Another wonderful new fruit and almost the exact opposite from 

 Apex in most respects. Trees productive, of weeping habit, with long, 

 slender branches. Fruit apricot-like in form, six inches around, with 

 a purple velvety skin. Finely dotted and mottled scarlet. Flesh firm, 

 apricot-like in texture, deep crimson with lighter shades near the stone. 

 Eieh apricot flavor with plum accompaniment. One of the most unique 

 of all fruits, especially as the trees bear fruit where all apricots _ fail to 

 produce a crop. Ripens August 15th. 



Trees, each $3; two, $5; per ten, $20. 



New Plumcot— "Corona" 



Fruit beautiful, large, golden yellow, with velvety skin and with a 

 red cheek. Flesh yellow, fairly firm, sweet, delicious. Clingstone. Tree 

 a strong, upright grower. Productive. Ripens here July 25th. 



Trees, each $3; two, $5; per ten, $20. 



One each of the three Plumcots, $6. 



A New Peach— The "Leader" 



The earliest of all the Muir Crawford types, ripening here in July. 

 Unusually vigorous trees, which never fail to produce a full crop of. 

 beautiful, smooth, globular, bright yellow fruit, with d^ep crimson blush ; 

 flesh pure yellow, meaty, firm, very sweet and delicious — far superior to 

 any other. Stone exceedingly small — free. Never a trace of mildew or 

 curl leaf. The best very early peach for canning or shipping owing to its 

 earliness, productiveness, globular form, beautiful appearance, firm delicious 

 flesh and long keeping qualities. A peach with all the good qualities of 

 the Muir and Early Crawford combined and with the addition of other 

 new ones. As a home peach, it is also tmexeelled. 



A few trees each $1 ; two, $1.50 ; per ten, $6. 



Dormant buds, each 75e; two, $1; per ten, $3.50. 



A New Peach— The "National" 



A giant Muir Crawford peach which like the "Leader" is yellow, 

 but is nearly half covered with deep crimson blush and crimson dots. 

 Tree a strong grower and never failing producer of very firm, nearly 

 globular fruits, excelling either parent. Flesh deepest yellow. Stone 

 small, free. Ripening from ten days to two weeks after the "Leader" 

 and before the old Muirs and Crawfords. Never a trace of mildew or 

 curl leaf. A firm and most delicious peach when canned and for drying 



