ALLEN’S 
Mae-to-uame 
PEACHES 
ALLEN’S ‘“‘SSURE-CROP” ELBERTA. This 
seedling of the famous Elberta Peach was sent us 
several years ago by one of our customers. We 
have tried it in several states and find it the best 
Peach ever introduced. Fruit is very large, fine 
textured and sweet in flavor. Yellow with a deep 
red cheek. Extra prolific and hardy and certain 
to bear a wonderful crop.. You can’t make a mis- 
take by choosing this variety. 
BELLE OF GEORGIA. Very large, white with red cheek; 
flesh white and firm, excellent flavor. A good vigorous white 
sort. Early September. 
CHAMPION. White with red cheek, very large, early and 
productive; sweet, rich, juicy. Very hardy; one of the best 
white sorts. August. 
CUMBERLAND. The tree is vigorous and hardy. The fruit is 
larger than Belle of Georgia, attractively colored with red, 
oval in shape. The flesh is white, almost freestone, and of good 
quality. Early. 
ELBERTA. See Allen’s ‘“‘Sure-Crop”’ Elberta. 
FERTILE HALE. The good old ‘Hale flavor’? makes Fertile 
Hale popular. An Elberta-Hale type Peach which ripens after 
Elberta, often adding as much as 20 per cent to your Peach 
profits! Excellent quality, fine, firm golden flesh. Colors more 
than Elberta. Ranks high in hardiness, yield, canning and 
shipping quality. Trees are self-pollenizing. Freestone. 
GOLDEN JUBILEE. A choice recent introduction by the New 
Jersey Experiment Station; already popular and given a high 
rating. Tree habits and fruit resemble Elberta. The skin is 
yellow with red blush; flesh golden yellow, juicy, tender, sweet, 
and freestone. Our choice of all early sorts. 
HALE-HAVEN. A large new yellow freestone developed at 
Michigan Experiment Station. Its high color, even before 
complete ripening gives it great market value because of the 
advantage of premature picking, packing, and shipping with- 
out loss. Hardy and productive, richly colored and flavored. 
Very profitable to plant. Ready two weeks before Elberta. 
J. H. HALE. A beautiful, enormous, round, golden yellow 
Peach with wonderful flavor. Keeps well and is an all-round, 
most attractive, freestone, market sort. Ripens five days 
earlier than Elberta. 
LEMON FREE. Lemon shape and color, light yellow skin and 
flesh. Extra good for canning and one of the best bearers in 
existence. Very hardy in all climates. A good sort for com- 
mercial plantings. 
Fifty-five Years of “Golden Rule” 



ELBERTA 
PEACH 
ORIOLE. Another variety from the New Jersey Station, ready 
by the middle of August. The tree is large and very productive. 
Fruit is medium to large in size, roundish, yellow, very good in 
quality. Freestone. 
RED ELBERTA. U.S. Plant Patent 232. Ten days earlier than 
Elberta and much redder in color. Very profitable on the early 
market. Splendid flavor and quality. 
REDHAVEN. The earliest shipping Peach grown. Rich red 
before it is actually ripe, presenting a beautiful appearance on 
the tree and when packed. It is red all over and could be 
picked ten days before ripe. Ripens thirty days before Elberta 
and offers an opportunity to the peach grower to extend his 
picking over a long period. Yellow freestone of remarkable 
flavor. Very hardy. Another Michigan origination. 
ROCHESTER. A fine early yellow freestone. Ripens about 
August 10. Large fruit that sells well on the market. A strong, 
prolific grower, coming’ into bearing young. One of the best 
sorts for orchard planting. 
SALBERTA. A highly successful cross between Salwey and 
Elberta, conserving the size and quality of Elberta and the 
lateness of Salwey. Has been used successfully in northern 
Ohio and pleases all who have tried it. Late September. 
SHIPPER’S LATE RED (Big Red). A new Peach with 
several distinctive claims. Round, bulkier than Elberta, 
beautifully flushed red. The flesh is yellow, sweet, juicy and of 
pleasing flavor; freestone. Bears young, annually and abun- 
dantly; very hardy. Its greatest commercial advantage— 
aside from supreme quality—lies in its ability to stay on the 
tree much longer than most sorts, thus many times saving the 
entire crop where lack of time, continued rains or glutted 
markets create wastage. 
VALIANT. A seedling of Elberta of Canadian origin. A large, 
yellow-fleshed, high-colored Peach. Very hardy and produc- 
tive. Ripens earlier than Elberta. 
Service q 
