Our Trees Are America’s No. 1 Value — Prices on Page 5 
SHIPPERS LATE RED (1%) 
A Favorite Wherever Planted. 
Hard To Eeual As A Large, Productive, Hand- 
some Peach To Foliow Elberta. 
A large, very high colored, attractive red, yellow 
fleshed freestone and good quality peach, of distinct 
Hale type. Ripens just after Elberta and J. H. Hale. 
A good shipping peach, extremely productive. Very 
hardy and its beauty and size enables it to bring top 
prices on the markets. This splendid variety should be 
planted more extensively as we know of no variety we 
can recommend more highly for a peach to follow the 
Elberta. 
Much confusion exists regarding the various strains 
of this variety. We are growing the true type as de- 
termined by comparison with fruit in U. S. D. A. test 
orchards, which is known as the Hale type. 
GAGE ELBERTA (14a) 
A Disease Resistant Bud Sport of The Famous 
Elberta Peach, Which We Can Recommend Highly. 
Recommended for resistance to bacterium  pruni. 
The tree grows thrifty as the Elberta and looks much 
like the old time Elberta. Gage Elberta blooms from 
two to four days after Elberta and apparently has a 
very strong blossom setting a crop of fruit under un- 
favorable condtions. The fruit is so near the Elberta 
that only an expert can distinguish the difference. It 
ripens two to three days later than Elberta. 
This variety is proving well adapted to Southern. con- 
ditions in the trial planting at Columbia and Clemson, 
South Carolina and is to be preferred over the Elberta 
in many respects. 
THE BRACKETT PEACH 14») 
This is a comparatively new variety in some sections, 
but has been tried and proven one of the most profit- 
able peaches in the South. Its season is about five 
days after Elberta, with a beautiful orange-yellow skin 
tinged with carmine. Flesh is a deep yellow and much 
higher flavored than Elberta. This peach sizes up well 
under heavy crops and is equal to Elberta as a shipper. 
A perfect freestone. 
MEDIUM LATE VARIETIES 
HOPE FARM (15) originating on Hope Farm, 
Bergen County, New Jersey. A large, white-fleshed 
freestone peach of superior quality. Follows Elberta 
about five days in ripening. Partially self-fertile. Ex- 
tremely hardy in bud. Proving a favorite Northern 
Districts. 
Gemmers Late Elberta (15a) 
Beautiful color, large size, excellent quality, fine 
‘shipping and keeping ability combine in GEM- 
MERS LATE ELBERTA to make it one of the 
most promising varieties we have ever observed 
to follow the Elberta season. 
Originating in the orchards of Mr. Conrad Gemmer, 
Sussex, N. J., we have observed this peach for several 
years and it seems superior in appearance, size, quality 
and shipping ability to any other peach we now have 
Introduced by us in 1925, 
GEMMERS LATE ELBERTA. 
SC lCédlow 
(See Description Above.) 
Photograph shows basket of Erly-Red-Fre Peaches 
packed 214” up on the farm of Morris April .Bros., 
Bridgeton, N. J. Mr. April reports “The Erly-Red-Fre”’ 
was the only variety which came thru last winter’s 
freeze and set a crop. The fruit sold at prices from 
$3.00 to $3.50 per % bushel basket. 
Reports such as this attest the success of Erly-Red- 
Fre in all sections of the country. 
(GEMMERS LATE ELBERTA CONTINUED) 
to follow Elberta. It is a typical Elberta in fruit and 
tree characteristics. It ripens 10 to 12 days after El- 
berta, just following Shippers Late Red and before 
Lizzie and Salberta. There is a place here for a good 
Elberta type peach and we believe Gemmers Late El- 
berta will fill it. N. J. Experiment Station has grown 
Gemmers for several years and seem favorably impress- 
ed with its performance at New Brunswick. Fruits are 
very uniform, large, well covered with a brilliant red 
on an attractive golden yellow, almost fuzzless, having 
a smooth tough skin. Flesh very firm, being slightly 
tinged with red about the pit but red does not extend 
into the golden yellow flesh. Originating at Sussex, N. 
J., well up in the Mountains where many varieties of 
peaches fail to stand their climatic conditions should 
recommend GHMMERS as a hardy variety both in tree 
and bud. WE RECOMMEND “GEMMERS LATE EL- 
BERTA” FOR TRIAL IN ALL PEACH SECTIONS 
WHERE YOU WISH TO CONTINUE THE ELBERTA 
SEASON WITH A REAL PEACH. 
LIZZIE 16) 
SIZE — FIRMNESS — FINE COLOR — EXCELLENT 
QUALITY COMBINE TO MAKE THIS PEACH A 
FAVORITE TO FOLLOW ELBERTA SEASON 
The origin of this peach has not been fully determin- 
ed, yet it has been very successfully grown by commer- 
cial orchardists of New Jersey, Connecticut and in sev- 
eral southern states. It is a distinct Elberta type 
peach, very large freestone, having a fine yellow flesh 
and the peach ripens slowly after being taken off the 
tree. It ripens from 8 to 12 days after Elberta, colors 
well with a handsome red over a deep yellow undertone. 
The tree is thrifty, hardy, heavy bearer of regular 
crops. Some growers consider it the best of our pres- 
ent list of late peaches to follow Elberta. 
HEATH CLING (Cling) (16a) 
Very white with delicate red blush; flesh white, 
slightly red at the pit; tender, juicy, and 
sweet; a valuable sort for for canning and one 
that commands fancy prices in all markets. 
VERY LATE VARIETIES 
Large, round- 
with rich red cheeks; flesh yellow, firm 
and juicy and sugary; trees are strong grow- 
ers and bear plentiful crops. A late market sort. 
