0ountiful ttidge 



PEACH Trees 



Our Trees Are Triple Inspected For Your Protection 



THE COI.ORA PEACH 



GOLDEN JUBILEE (6a) 



A PROVEN MONEY MAKER 



No General Planting of Peaches is Complete 

 Without A Liberal Amount of Golden Jubilee 

 Trees. See Color Illustra'titon Cover Page. 



A development of the New Jersey Experiment Sta- 

 tion first offered by us during the Fall shipping season 

 of 1928. Planted and producing in every peach pro- 

 ducing section of the United States and Canada and 

 stands Avithout an equal as an early, yellow, freestone 

 peach of exceptional quality. - The Golden Jubilee is a 

 second generation seedling of the Elberta crossed with 

 the Greensboro. The tree is unusually hardv. The 

 buds resist low winter temperatures better than Elberta 

 and open later than Elberta which insures a regular 

 crop. The blossoms are self-fertile. The peach is med- 

 ium to large in size. The peach develops better if a 

 Avell balanced fertilizer is used. As the tree grows 

 older the fruit becomes firmer and develops more na- 

 turally. Ripens about four to five weeks before El- 

 berta. 



Large, creamy white with deep 

 blush ; skin tough, making it a 

 flesh tender, juicy, fine flavor. 



** CARMAN («b) 



good market variety 

 Fruit semi-cling. 



TRIOGEM (N.J.70) <«<•) 



An early, oval, red 

 all over, firm, yel- 

 low freestone peach ripening usually about two days 

 after Golden Jubilee or 20 to 25 days before Elberta. 

 The trees are medium in size, hardy and heavy bearers. 

 Trees require good soil and good culture for best re- 

 sults. 



S P^r^WPQTPR (6d) Large yellow and red peach. 

 n^^nriOlEin Vlesh yellow. of fine quality 



and exquisite flavor. Stone very small and will ship 

 well. The tree comes into bearing when very young, 

 is a strong, upright grower, and is hardy as an oak. 



* FAIR BEAUTY <') 



HARDINESS— GREAT BEAUTY— HIGH QUALITY 



recommend this peach for most all sections. Unrivaled 

 as an early canning variety. 



An early peach following Golden .Jubilee three to fivi* 

 days. Tree vigorous, spreading, hardy in bud, often 

 producing a crop when other varieties are winter 

 killed. Fruit is medium to large in size, skin a deep 

 golden yellow blushed with bright red, the flesh is 

 firm, tender, melting and juicy. Fruit hangs excep- 

 tionally well to tree and when full ripe is a perfect 

 freestone, clinging slightly when the peach is hard ripe, 

 an excellent market and canning peach which is adapt- 

 ed to both commercial and home use. It is recognized 

 in the South as a superior early yellow canning peach. 

 "We strongly recommend this peach for trial as a com- 

 mercial variety. The Fair Beauty originated near Ty- 

 ler, Texas, and in trial plantings shows its adaptaljili- 

 ty to central and eastern growing conditions. 



NEWDAY (NJ.79) (») 



FIREGLOW (71) <8a) 



A large, oval, yel- 

 low - fleshed peach 

 which begins to ripen a few days after Triogem. The 

 tree is somewhat more vigorous and the fruit averages 

 larger which makes the variety somewhat easier to grow 

 for market. The fruit is showy, firm in texture and 

 hangs to the tree well. It is not always a freestone 

 but this has not apparently affected the market demand. 



A large, oval, yel- 

 low - fleshed peach 

 which begins to ripen a few days after Golden Jubilee. 

 The fruit is firm and ripens slowly after being picked. 

 Develops early color and is an all over attractive red. 

 Quality is very good. Tree is somewhat tender in wood 

 and bud and is recommended for planting in South Jer- 

 sey and more southern latitudes. It is a freestone. 



MEDItlM EARLY VARIETIES 



COLORA PEACH <») 



An Outstanding Hardy, Early, Yellow Freestone 

 Peach. 



Tree and Buds Stand Low Temperatures Where 

 Other Varieties Fail. 



High Color, Superb Quality, Size and Hardiness 

 Are Reasons Why You Should Plant Colora. 

 Introduced in 1936. 



Our own introduction of a new frost resistant. yelloAv 

 freestone peach. Second generation trees as well as the 

 original branch have withstood temperatures during 

 the past winters of about 17 degrees below zero, when 

 most other varieties such as Elberta, Hiley Belle, Belle 

 of Georgia, Early Elberta and J. H. Hale were wiped 

 out by these Ioav temeperatures. The peach is an at- 

 tractive yellow, freestone, well-colored and of excellent 

 quality, ripening about 15 to 20 days before Elberta. 

 In size, it is about the same as Elberta. We believe 

 the planters will find this a valuable variety for plant- 

 ing in cold areas. 



GOLDEN GLOBE (N.J. 73) <9a) 



Where the market demands a large peach this variety 

 meets the demand. It is a very large, showy yellow 

 peach of delicious flavor, ripening about 20 days before 

 Elberta. The flesh ripens rather slowly and the fruit 

 hangs well to the tree making it valuable for roadside 

 and nearby markets. The tree is vigorous, upright and 

 spreading. Fruit buds are somewhat tender under cer- 

 tain conditions. Usually a freestone. 



VEDETTE (9b) 



A Peach of Proven Merit Adapting Itself To 

 Southern Peach Areas. 



Size, High Color, Excellent Quality and Shipping 

 Ability Establish the Vedette As One of the Lead- 

 ing Peaches to Follow Jubilee. 



A product of the Vineland Experimental Station, in 

 Canada, proving unusually well adapted in the various 

 peach growing sections of the United States. A seed- 

 ling of Elberta, resembling that variety in color and 

 type of flesh, but is more globular in shape, more high- 

 ly colored, and of much finer quality. The fruit is of 

 large size, yellow fleshed, freestone. The tree is vig- 

 orous, very hardy, comes into bearing early and is 

 very productive. The Vedette is proving very satis- 

 factory in trial plantings near Columbia and Clemson, 

 South Carolina, as well as other peach growing sections 

 of the Central and Eastern States. The fruit is firm 

 and a good shipper, ripening about one week after 

 Golden Jubilee. A fine peach that promises to be a 

 real money-maker for the Southern planter as well as 

 other sections, replacing the old Hiley with a- larger, 

 better quality, yellow, freeestone, productive peach. 



SUNHIGH (N.J. 82) <»«) Lt^ir-;/aVXSi 



colors weir all over before it ripens, softens slowly, mak- 

 ing it a good commercial peach. Flesh inclines to ad- 

 here to the pit when hard ripe but is generally free- 

 stone. The tree is spreading in growth and the dormant 

 buds are hardy. The variety seems to do best in hilly 

 sections and requires thorough summer spraying. 



OUR NATIONAL FOOD PROGRAM FOR THE FUTURE 



Wartime conditious have made America and the World more Fruit-Conscious tlian ever before. 

 Fruits take their riglitful phice in man's dietary schedule. Plan to meet the coming demand by 

 planting Bountiful Ridge Grown Trees and Plants. 



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