Illustrated Catalogue of Dutch Flower Roots. 
Miscellaneous Fruit Trees, &c. (continued). 
Select 
Dwarfs or Bushes 
Dwarf Trained 
Standards 
„ Trained 
Pyramids ... p< 
Plums. 
per doz. 10s. 6d. ; each Is. Od. 
37s. 6d. ; „ 3s. 6d. 
„ 21s. Od. ; „ 2s. Od. 
„ 5s. Od. 
doz. 21s. to 54s. ; each 2s. to 5s. 
General List. 
I) denotes dessert , K kitchen. 
Belgian Purple (D.K.). Medium-sized fruit, colour a 
deep rich purple ; very sweet, a fine cooking variety. Aug. 
Bryanston Greengage (D.). Large, sugary, and richly 
flavoured ; an excellent and abundant bearing sort. Aug. 
Coe’s Golden Drop (I).). Large oval fruit, pale yollow 
spotted with red ; one of the very best plums for dessert or 
preserving. End of Sept. 
Cox’s Emperor (K.). Large dark reddish-purple fruit, 
firm flesh, sweet, rich, and juicy ; a very fine bearer. Sept. 
Damson, Farleigh Prolific (K.). An abundant 
bearing and most useful sort. Sept. 
Damson Prune (K.). Small oval fruit; a great bearer. 
Sept. 
Denniston’s Superb (I).). Large oval fruit, greenish- 
yellow blotched purple ; a delicious dessert plum, and an 
abundant bearer. Aug. 
Diamond (K.). Large oval, dark purple fruit; an excellent 
variety for cooking or preserving. Sept. 
Early Prolific (D.). Medium-sized purple fruit; a valuable 
early plum ; the tree is hardy and a great bearer. July. 
Early Orleans (K.). An abundant bearing and very useful 
variety. Aug. 
Golden Gage (D). Large fruit, of very rich and delicious 
flavour ; a most excellent and prolific sort. Sept. 
Green Gage (D.). Well-known delicious plum ; a general 
favourite. Aug. 
Select Plums ( continued ). 
Grand Duke (D). Very large purple-fruited variety, of 
fine flavour, and a first-class late variety. Oct. 
Huling’s Superb (1).). Very large oval greenish yellow 
fruit. A first-class and handsome dessert plum. End of Aug. 
Jefferson (D). A large and delicious plum, hardy, and a 
good bearer. Sept. 
July Greengage (D.). Medium-sized fruit, yellow, blotched 
with crimson ; an excellent early sort, and a good cropper. 
J uly. 
Kirke’s (D.). One of the very best of the blue plums, the 
fruit is medium-sized and richly flavoured; a first-rate 
dessert variety. Sept. 
Magnum Bonum, Red (K.). Large oval-shaped red 
fruit. A fine-looking culinary plum. Sept. 
Magnum Bonum, White (K.). Large yellow fruit; an 
excellent kitchen variety. Sept. 
Orleans (K.). A good cooking or preserving plum; a great 
bearer. Aug. 
Pond’s Seedling (K.). Fine large bright red fruit; a 
great bearer, and first-rate for preserving. Early in Sept. 
Prince Englebert (K.D.). Very large deep purple fruit, 
sweet and rich, with a brisk flavour, fine for cooking or 
dessert ; a great bearer. Sept. 
Purple Gage (D). Medium-sized purple fruit; a richly 
flavoured and first-class dessert plum. Sept. 
Prince of Wales (K.). Medium-sized purple fruit; a 
splendid plum for cooking. End of August. 
Beine Claude de Bavay (1).). Large, round, greenish- 
yellow fruit of the “gage” type, rich and delicious flavour; 
the tree is hardy and a great bearer. Beginning of October. 
The Czar (D.K.). Very large, purple fruit of rich flavour; 
it is an abundant bearer, and will prove most valuable to 
market growers on account of its earliness, fine appearance, 
and excellent quality. End of July. 
Transparent Gage (D). Large oval greenish-yellow fruit 
marked with rod ; flesh rich, sweet, and juicy ; of the 
highest excellence, and superior to almost all other plums. 
Middle of Sept. 
Victoria (K.). A well-known and very fine variety ; the tree 
is hardy and an almost constant bearer, 'l'hc most useful 
kind of the season. Early in Sept. 
Washington (D.K.). Large orange-yellow fruit, dotted with 
crimson; a first-rate plum either for dessert or preserving. 
Sept. 
White Bullace (K.). A very prolific and useful culinary 
sort. End of Oct. 
Currants. 
Strong bushes ... per 100, 21s. to 35s. ; per doz. 3s. to Gs. 
BLACK CHAMPION (see illustration, p. 43). A ver}' fine 
and remarkable variety, bearing large bunches of handsome, 
globular, richly-flavoured fruit, the individual berries, when 
well grown, being equal in size to medium-sized grapes. It 
is a vigorous grower, wonderfully prolific, and retains its 
splendid colour and freshness for a much longer time than 
other varieties; undoubtedly the best of all the black 
currants. Was awarded a First Class Certificate by the 
Royal Horticultural Society, and pronounced by the 
Committee to be the finest Black Currant ever seen at 
South Kensington. 
Strong young bushes, per doz. 4s. Gd. ; each 6d. 
BLACK— 
Common 
Lee’s Prolific 
Naples 
Ogden’s 
WHITE— 
Dutch 
Transparent White 
RED- 
Cherry 
La Fertile 
New Giant 
Baby Castle. Fine 
Red Dutch 
&c., &c. 
From C. WRIGHT, Esq., Harlesden, N.W. 
Nov. 21st. 
“The Fruit Trees you sent me have done exceedingly well.’’ 
