PEACH Trees 



SEE PAGE 8 FOR PRICES ON ALL VARIETIES OF PEACH TREES 



7 WHITE HALE (N.J. 63) 



A large white 

 fleshed freestone 



of good quality, ripening with J. H. Hale. Tree is vigorous. 



A fine white fleshed peach to follow Belle of Georgia. 



AFTERGLOW (N.J. 84) a*> P^^EiLr? 



ta, therefore, often meets good, strong markets. Fruits are 

 large, round, oval in shape and almost completely over- 

 spread with red. The flesh is yellow stained with red about 

 the pit and is free. The trees are vigorous and rapid grow- 

 ers, the fruit buds appear more hardy than J. H. Hale where 

 observed. Recommended for trial in most districts. 



SHIPPERS LATE RED («»> 



(Bountiful Strain) 



Best of the Hale type Shippers Late Red. A Large, 

 Productive, Handsome peach recommended to follow 

 Elberta. Brings high prices. 



A very large, very highly 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 mar- 

 kets. This splendid variety should be planted more exten- 

 sively 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 determined 

 by comparison with fruit in U. S. D. A. test orchards, which 

 is known as the Hale type. 



SHIPPERS LATE RED 

 Bountiful Ridge Hale Type has proven to be the finest of 

 all Shippers Late Red Strains. A trial will prove it. 



GAGE ELBERTA <12»>) 



MR. PLANTER: Don't pass up Gage, it has every- 

 thing a peach should have — size, quality and beauty. 



A Disease Resistant Bud Sport of the Famous El- 

 berta Peach, Which We Recommend Highly. 



Recommended for resistance to bacterium pruni. The tree 

 grows as thrifty as the Elberta and looks much like the old 

 time Elberta. Gage Elberta blooms two to four days after 

 Elberta and apparently has a very strong blossom setting a 

 crop of fruit under unfavorable conditions. The fruit is so 

 near like the Elberta that only an expert can distinguish the 

 difference. Ripens two to three days later than Elberta. 



V THE BRACKETT PEACH «*> 



ONE OF THE BEST VARIETIES TO FOLLOW ELBERTA 

 AND IT IS PROVING A GREAT COMMERCIAL PEACH. 



This is a comparatively new variety in some sections, but 

 has been tried and proven one of the most profitable peaches 

 in the South and Central areas. Its season is about five days 

 after Elberta, with a beautiful orange-yellow skin tinged 

 with carmine. Flesh is a deep yellow and much lighter flav- 

 ored than Elberta. This peach sizes up well under heavy 

 crops and is equal to Elberta as a shipper. A perfect free- 

 stone and a real peach. 



This is a picture of one of our larges 



blocks 



of peach 



trees which will be for sale this fall. PI 



an To P 



ant This 



Year With Bountiful Strain Peach Trees. 







- GEMMERS LATE ELBERTA «s> 



RINGS THE BELL — A WINNER 



Beautiful color, large size, excellent quality, fine 

 shipping and keeping ability combine in GEADLERS 

 LATE ELBERTA to make it one of the most prom- 

 ising varieties we have ever observed to follow the 

 Elberta season. Gemmers Late Elberta has what it 

 takes to become a leader of its season. 



It is a typical Elberta in fruit and tree characteristics. 



type peach and we believe Gem- 

 Late Elberta will fill it. Fruits are very uniform, large, 

 well covered with a brilliant red 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 the climatic conditions, should re- 

 commend GEMMERS as a hardv variety both in tree and 

 bud. 



RIO-OSO-GEM d3a) 



WIDELY GROWN — A BEAUTIFUL PEACH 

 You can get the Genuine Rio-Oso-Gem now at Bountiful 

 Ridge Nurseries, our budwood coming from fine fruiting 

 orchards in New Jersey. 



A HALE TYPE LATE PEACH FOLLOWING ELBERTA 

 7 TO 10 DAYS. FRUIT LARGE IN SIZE WITH BRIL- 

 LIANT RED COLOR AND LIGHT PUBESCENCE. THE 

 FLESH IS FIRM AND FINE TEXTURED WITH EX- 

 CELLENT FLAVOR. BECAUSE OF ITS FIRMNESS OF 

 FLESH IT IS FINE FOR FREEZING. CANNING AND 

 OTHER USES. RIO-OSO-GEM IS ALSO AN OUTSTAND- 

 ING COMMERCIAL VARIETY. 



LIZZIE d4) 



SIZE — FIRMNESS — FINE COLOR — EXCELLENT 



QUALITY COMBINE TO MAKE THIS PEACH A 



FAVORITE TO FOLLOW GEMMERS LATE ELBERTA 



The origin of this peach has not been fully determined. 

 It has been very successfully grown by commercial orchard- 

 ists in N. J., Conn., and in several Southern states. It is a 

 distinct Elberta type peach, large, freestone having a fine yel- 

 low flesh and the peach ripens very slowly after being taken 

 off the tree. It ripens from 12 to 16 days after Elberta, col- 

 ors 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 present list of real 

 late peaches. 



(15) 



7 AUTUMN (N.J. 145) 



CONSIDERED ONE OF THE BEST 

 VERY LATE VARIETIES 



The latest, large, yellow freestone ripening fully fourteen 

 days after Elberta. Later than Late Crawford, or Rio-Oso- 

 Gem. The tree is a very vigorous grower and should be 

 planted on well-drained good peach soil. For the grower 

 who wishes good size, high quality fruit for road side stand 

 or nearby markets. Autumn fills the bill. 



NEW . . . FOR FALL 1959 

 SUMMERQUEEN (N.J. 157) 



A high quality, large, attractive, firm, yellow-fleshed 

 peach ripening about with Sunhigh and just before Gold- 

 en East. Less susceptible to bacterial spot than Sunhigh. 

 Has large, showy, imperfect blossoms which need pollina- 

 tion. Sets good crop with proper cross-pollination and is 

 recommended to replace Sunhigh where Bacterial spot is 

 a problem. 



