Plant Fraser’s Raspberries for excellence—If in doubt plant Latham. 
PLUMS 
Two year old trees No. 1 $1.00 each; $6 for 10; $45 for 100. 
ARCHDUKE—Late, a dark blue large plum with yellow flesh of good 
quality. Good shipper. 
BRADSHAW—Late, ripens with Elberta peach. A large reddish-blue plum, 
dull yellow flesh, good quality, hardy, very productive. Excellent when canned. 
FELLENBURG, ITALIAN PRUNE, YORK STATE PRUNE. Late, one of the 
best of the prunes, excellent shipper, excellent when cooked or canned. Fruit 
large, flesh greenish yellow, very good to best quality. We have an extra nice 
lot of trees budded from a fine bearing block. 
GERMAN PRUNE—Hardy, healthy, vigorous, productive but the fruit is 
not as large as Fellenburg. Good to very good quality. 
GOLDEN DROP, COES’ GOLDEN DROP—The largest, handsomest and best 
of the yellow plums, requires a longer season than is available in Western New 
York in order to mature. Excellent for all purposes—dessert, cooking, can¬ 
ning, preserving, prune making. 
IMPERIAL GAGE—One of the largest of the Gage plums, when grown on 
suitable soils. Likes sandy soils, on which it is of very good quality. 
LOMBARD—A hardy plum grown largely for canning, of but average quality. 
REINE CLAUDE—A golden-yellow plum when ripe with juicy, firm, sweet, 
very good flavored flesh. Midseason. Hardy, productive. Regarded highly 
for canning and preserving. 
SHROPSHIRE DAMSON—One of the best of the Damsons. 
PEACHES 
The commercial production of peaches in Eastern America is built on one 
variety, ELBERTA. For nearly 40 years this peach has proven itself the one 
reliable money-maker, and as yet we see nothing to supplant it, that is why we 
grow it. Other peaches are grown to extend the season—J. H. HALE grows 
larger, it needs a pollinizer and bees or other insects to transfer the pollen 
and it is subject to collar-rot. BELLE OF GEORGIA is an excellent white 
peach to precede Elberta for home use and local market. Hiley, another white, 
ripens before Belle of Georgia. ROCHESTER, an early yellow peach of Craw¬ 
ford type, needs constant dusting to prevent brown rot, and thinning to secure 
size. We can secure other varieties for those wishing us to do so, and describe 
66 leading varieties in “American Fruits.” For home use planting we suggest 
Champion (the finest-flavored peach their is), Belle of Georgia, Early Craw¬ 
ford and Late Crawford, where they are reasonably sure, or Kalamazoo in¬ 
stead and for those desiring a later peach Salwey and Wilma. 
Yearling trees 9/16 in. caliper, 75c each; $6.00 for 10; Hundred rates on 
application. 
QUINCES 
The Standard Orange Quince. 3 ft. to 4 ft. 75 cents each. 4 ft. to 5 ft. $1.00. 
A FEW BEARING SIZE PLANTS—$2.50 each up. 
Do not hoard or waste money—plant trees. 
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