22 
CATALOGUE AND PRICE-LIST OF 
LIST C. 
Varieties best adapted to Northwestern Florida, extreme Eastern and Southern 
Georgia and the Gulf Coast region of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas: 
ANGEL. 
Florida Gem. 
Reeves’ Mammoth. 
Amelia. 
FLORIDA CRAWFORD. 
Sunset. 
Alexander. 
Franklin’s August. 
Sanders’ Cling. 
Bidwell’s Late. 
George IV. 
Stump the World. 
Climax. 
GIBBONS’ OCTOBER. 
Salway. 
COUNTESS. 
General Lee. 
Smock. 
CABLER’S INDIAN. 
Honey. 
Texas. 
Carpenter’s Cling. 
Hale’s Early. 
Thurber. 
Crawford’s Early. 
IMPERIAL. 
Townsend. 
Crawford’s Late. 
Japan Dwarf Blood. 
TABER’S No. 26 (New). 
Chinese Free. 
LA REINE. 
TABER’S No. 29 “ 
Chinese Cling. 
LA MAGNIFIQUE. 
TABER’S No. 31 “ 
Chinese Blood. 
Mountain Rose. 
TABER’S No. 33 “ 
EARLY CREAM. 
Onderdonk. 
TABER’S No. 34 “ 
Elberta. 
Oldmixon Free. 
VICTORIA. 
Edith. 
Pallas. 
WALDO. 
Elina. POWERS’ SEPTEMBER. 
LIST D. 
Varieties best adapted for general planting in most of the peach-growing sec- 
tions of the United States, not specially mentioned in I 
ists A., B. and C.: 
Amelia. 
Florida Gem. 
Pallas. 
Alexander. 
Florida Crawford. 
Powers’ September. 
Climax. 
Franklin’s August. 
Reeves’ Mammoth. 
Countess. 
GEORGE IV. 
Stump the World. 
Cabler’s Indian. 
Gibbons’ October. 
SALWAY. 
Carpenter’s Cling. 
GENERAL LEE. 
SMOCK. 
CRAWFORD’S EARLY. 
Hale’s Early. 
Texas. 
CRAWFORD’S LATE. 
I mperial. 
Thurber. 
Chinese Free. 
Japan Dwarf Blood. 
Taber’s No. 26 (New). 
Chinese Cling. 
La Reine. 
Taber’s No. 29 “ 
Chinese Blood. 
La Magnifique. 
Taber’s No. 31 “ 
Early Cream. 
Mountain Rose. 
Taber’s No. 33 “ 
ELBERTA. 
Onderdonk. 
Taber’s No. 34 “ 
Elma. 
Oldmixon Free. 
Victoria. 
PLUMS. 
Since the introduction of the Kelsey and other Oriental Plums a few years ago, 
the cultivation of these Japanese varieties has been yearly on the increase, and they 
are now, to a large extent, superceding the older native sorts. A judicious selection 
of these Japanese varieties will furnish a succession of tine fruit from June till Sep¬ 
tember, and we advise every one to plant them, both for home use and for market 
JAPANESE VARIETIES. 
Kelsey.— The success that has attended the planting of this variety during 
the past few years throughout many portions of the South has brought it into such 
prominent notice that it does not longer need an extended introduction of its 
merits. We have grown the enormous number of 476 of these fruits on a single* 
three-year-old tree. We have grown many specimens that would measure from 
eight to eight and three-fourth inches in circumference, and which have weighed 
