0outttitul Hiage 



PEACHTrees 



Our Trees Are Triple Inspected For Your Protection 



THE COLORA PEACH 



DIXIGEM 



For description see Page 14. 



REDHAVEN <« 



(3a) 



For description see Page 16. 



CUMBERLAND <i^> 



The tree is a vigorous 

 grower. Tlie fruit. is at- 

 tractively colored with red, oval in shape. The flesh 

 is white, almost free. Ripens just before Carman. 

 Cumberland continues to gain in popularity in all 

 peach sections. 



GOLDEN JUBILEE <5) 



A PROVEN MONEY MAKER 



No General Planting: of Peaches is Complete Without 

 A Liberal Amount of Golden Jubilee Trees. See Color 

 Illustration Cover Page. 



A development of the Xew Jersey Experiment Sta- 

 tion first offered by us during Fall shipping season 

 of 1928. Planted and producing in every peach pro- 

 ducing section of the United States and Canada and 

 stands without an equal as an early, yellow, free- 

 stone peach of exceptional quality. The Golden jubilee 

 is a second generation seedling of the Elberta crossed 

 with the Greensboro. The tree is unusually hardy. 

 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 medium to large in size. The peach develops better 

 if a well balanced fertilizer is used. As the tree grows 

 older the fruit becomes firmer and develops more 

 naturally. Ripens about three to four weeks before 

 Elberta. 



NOTE: GOLDEN JUBILEE — Trees available on Ne- 

 matode Resistant Root Stock. $.10 extra per tree. See 

 Page 20. 



THE FAIRHAVEN PEACH r.^^ 



A recent introduction from South Haven Experiment 

 Station. 



Recommended for trial to lengthen Golden Jubilee 

 season and precede Halehaven. 



Fairhaven is a cross between J. H. Hale and South 

 Haven. Trees have shown no weakness to date and 

 are vigorous and productive. 



Fairhaven has the same tendency for heavy fruit 

 setting as Halehaven and Redhaven, but produces larger 

 size fruit than these two varieties. 



Fruits of Fairhaven are medium to large, round, 

 bright golden color with attractive red cheek. 



Skin smooth and tough. Fruit firm and ships w^ell. 

 The flesh is medium yellow with moderate amount of 

 red around the pit, moderately fine textured and good 

 flavor. It resists browning which is of great advantage 

 in processing. A freestone. 



We recommend the variety for testing in a moderate 

 way. Trees limited for this season. 



TRIOGEM (N.J. 70) (SW a. ear... ^oval. ^..d 



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 

 results. 



FAIR BEAUTY O") 



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 

 five days. Tree vigorous, spreading, very 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 

 exceptionally 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 

 Avhich is adapted to both commercial and home use. 

 We again grow and offer this fine variety because of 

 numerous requests from growers. 



MEDIUM EARLY VARIETIES 



COLORA PEACH <6) 



An outstanding Hardy, Early, Yellow Freestone Peach. 



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, yel- 

 low 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 

 Belie, Belle of Georgia, Early Elberta and J. H. Hale 

 were wiped out by these low temperatures. The peach 

 is an attractive yellow, freestone, well-colored and of 

 excellent ciuality, 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 

 planting in cold areas. 



VEDETTE (6a) 



Size, High Color, Excellent Quality and Shipping 

 Ability Establish the Vedette As One of the Leading 

 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 seedling 

 of Elberta, resembling that variety in color and type 

 of flesh but is more globlar in shape, more highly 

 colored, and of finer quality. The fruit is of large size, 

 yellow fleshed, freestone. The tree is vigorous, very 

 hardy, comes into bearing early and is very productive. 



NOTE: VEDETTE — Trees available on Nematode 

 Resistant Root Stock. $.10 extra per tree. See Page 20. 



SUNHIGH(N.J.82) <«"> Llll^Ve^ "^IS^ 



colors well all over before it ripens, softens slowly, 

 making it a good commercial peach. Flesh inclines 

 to adhere to the pit when hard ripe, but is generally 

 freestone. 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. 



SOUTHLAND <" 



A promising new yellow fleshed variety that looks 

 very good to precede HalehaAcn. Don't miss out on 

 this one. A trial planting will prove its merit. 



New Yellow Fleshed varietv ripening in Hiley sea- 

 son. Released by the U.S.D.A. July, 1946, and tested 

 under No. FV4-155. Southland is a seedling of Hale- 

 haven selfed. It ripens about with Hiley or IG days 

 before Elberta. The fruit is a freestone, medium to 

 large size, round, and has litle fuzz. The color is 

 attractive with a light-red blush covering about half 

 the peach at shipping ripe stage. The flesh is yellow, 

 firm, slow softening, medium textured, good fiavor. 



The trees are vigorous and productive, blossoms large 

 and self fertile. 



The variety has been fruited and tested in Georgia, 

 Mississippi and Louisiana. Southland is recommended 

 as a shipping variety to precede Sullivan's Elberta in 

 all southern areas and northern growers will find it 

 outstanding to replace Hiley, Eclipse, Champion, South 

 Haven and others which ripen in the same season. 



Note: We have observed the Southland at Port Valley 

 Experiment Station since 1941 and feel it will prove to 

 be a fine long distance shipper, due to the firmness and 

 slow softening trait shown after picking. 



NOTE: SOUTHLAND— Trees are available on Nema- 

 tode Resistant Root Stock. $.10 extra per tree. See 

 Page 20. 



16 



