PEACHES.. 
. Best and Hardiest Varieties 
‘Welches Prices are Right. , , Order Now 
PRICES 
5 to 6 ft.—30c Each, Not Prepaid. Per 10, 28c Each, Not Prepaid. 
3 to 4 ft.—20c Each, Postpaid. Per 10, 17y2C Each, Postpaid. 
For the commercial grower. Peaches produce fortunes, and a well- 
cared-for Peach orchard is a veritable mint for coining money. We list the 
best and hardiest varieties. 
CHAMPION (Freestone). Fruit large, beautiful in appear- 
pearance, flavor delicious, sweet, rich and juicy; skin 
creainy white with red cheeks; freestone. The peculiarity 
of this acquisition is its hardiness. It stood temperatures 
of 18 degrees below zero and produced an abundant 
crop the following season. August. 
CRAWFORD'S EARLY (Freestone). Highly esteemed for 
market. Fruit large, oblong, yellow, showy red cheeks. 
Flesh yellow, juicy, sweet; good bearer. August. 
ELBERTA (Freestone). Fruit large, yellow with red cheeks; 
flesh yellow, juicy, fine quality. Tree hardy and exceed¬ 
ingly productive. Ripens with the Crawford's Early. Ex¬ 
ceptionally large and fine. August. 
HALE HAVEN (Freestone). The outstanding characteristics 
of this new peach are its extreme hardiness, its early 
bearing, its rich yellow and red colors, and its shipping 
qualities. 
HAWKEYE (Freestone). New hardy peach. Produces fruit 
in spite of heat and cold. Ripens early and has fine 
flavor. 
J. H. HALE (Freestone). The fruit is larger than the El- 
berta, a perfect freestone, somewhat roundish, rich golden 
yellow, covered with carmine. Skin thick and entirely 
without fuzz. The flesh is dark yellow, fine grained and 
firm, parting as easily from the pit as any Elberta. The 
flavor is excellent, absolutely of the best. The tree is 
hardy, bears young and profusely, probably the best 
bearer known. One of the best for family use and espe¬ 
cially for the market. August. 
EARLY ELBETRTA (Free). Larger than Elberta, though 
identical in form; bright yellow with red blush; flesh yel¬ 
low, finer grained and sweeter than Elberta; ripens a 
week to ten days before Elberta; good shipper. Tree 
strong grower, hardy, good bearer. Last of August. 
ROCHESTER (Freestone). Early midseason. Color lemon- 
yellow changing to orange-yellow, blushed with deep, 
dark red. Skin thick, tough. Flesh yellow stained with 
red near the pit. Very juicy, tender and melting. Sweet. 
Highly flavored. Very good in quality. 
SOUTH HAVEN (Freestone). The great hardy Peach for 
cold regions, stands 10 degrees colder weather than any 
other Peach grown. Large, yellow freestone. Large as 
Elberta and a week earlier on the market. 
RED BIRD CLING. Here is the best of all early Peaches. 
The tree is hardy, vigorous and very productive. The 
fruit is of good size and of very showy appearance, be¬ 
ing an attractive creamy white, splashed or blushed with 
red. Flesh white, firm, meaty and of good flavor. A 
fruit that will stand shipping. One of the best home 
fruits and a leading early market Peach. 
BELLE OF GEORGIA. Very large, skin white with red 
cheek, flesh white, firm, and of excellent flavor. Tree a 
rapid grower, very prolific. Ripens with Early Crawford. 
HEATH CLING (Clingstone). Large, round, white, juicy 
and fine quality. Best for pickling. October. 
Peaches . . . the 
Queen of all 
Fruits . . . the 
Quickest of All 
Orchard Trees 
to Bear Profit¬ 
able Crops, 
PEACH 
COLLECTION 
2 Champion 
2 Golden Jubilee 
3 Elberta a 
3 Hale-Haven 
These 10 4-ft. Trees 
.75 
POST 
PAID 
10 Elberta, 4-ft., $1.75 Postpaid. 
Page Nine 
