A NEW PEACH 
Our 
Martin’s September 
Specialty 
(1-3 NATURAL SIZE) 
I WISH to briefly call the attention of those interested in the Nursery business Market Gardening, Com¬ 
mercial Fruit Growing, also those who grow fruit only for home consumption to this most excellent 
peach MARTIN’S SEPTEMBER. Several years ago Mr. H. A. Martin of Coweta County, Georgia, 
planted a lot of seed of the Raisin Peach and when these seedlings were a year old he set him out 
an orchard. A few years later his orchard began to bear fruit and among his trees appeared this late peach. 
My attention was called to it as a good peach to get into the Nursery. I watched its behavior for several 
seasons and found it a perfectly reliable variety and began to grow a few trees to supply a few customers 
right around near the place where the peach originated. As season after season passed this good peach 
increased in popularity and now I am growing the trees by the thousands and am prepared to supply them 
to large Commercial orchardists as well as to smaller planters. To those who are located near towns of 
two thousand inhabitants or more this excellent peach wdl prove a money maker right at your own home. 
They are good to eat and of course this makes them good to sell. 
The fruit is medium size, globular shape, color yellow ground with carmine marbling. Down thin. 
Flesh straw color, red at seed, firm, granular. Very sweet and rich. Quality best. Perfect freestone.- Its 
good quality and freedom from rot together with its time of ripening and capacity to ship well makes it 
the most desirable peach both for market and home orchards. It ripens perfectly and lasts from Septem¬ 
ber ist to the 20th and some seasons until October. I have put the price of trees in reach of all, and no 
one need be without Martin’s September peaches. 
Buds for Sale during June, July, August and September. Prices on both Trees and Buds 
made on application. 
FROM G. H. MILLER & SON, EXCELSIOR NURSERIES, Rome, Ga. 
MR. JAMES CURETON, Austell, Ga., September 2nd, 1905. 
Dear Sir—Yours of the 1st and also sample of peach received. This is certainly of high quality and think it would pay to propagate it for home 
use and local market, as it would certainly sell well. If the tree is a good bearer and has the other necessary qualifications for a profitable peach, 
think 1 would propagate it by all means. The only trouble about the sample was there was not enough of them. 
Respectfully, G. H. MILLER & SON. 
• Newnan, Ga., February 6th, 1907. 
Origin of the Peach known as Martin’s September came from seed of Raisin Peach at least 10 years ago and to more thoroughly test its merits I 
had about 100 budded from the parent tree to see if it would prove a success and it proved so satisfactory that I have about 800 young trees now 
about one year in the orchard of which I am very much pleased. It is a free-stone, resembles the Raisin in size and color only not so deep red as the 
latter; ripens from September 1st to 20th, a few I have had in October. It is the best seller of any fruit I ever tried on the local market. I have 
gathered three crops from the first lot of the budded trees referred to above. 
Respectfully, H. A. MARTIN 
I WILL BE PLEASED TO GIVE ANY FURTHER INFORMATION DESIRED UPON APPLICATION 
JAMES CURETON Prop. 
The CURETON NURSERIES 
AUSTELL, COBB COUNTY, GA. 
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