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Our Trees Are Triple Inspected For Your Protection 
THE COLORA PEACH 
JERSEYLAND (3) Full description page 7. 
FISHER PEACH (3a) ne full description on page 
DIXIGEM (3b) For description see page 7. 
REDHAVEN (3e) For description see page 7. 
CUMBERLAND (4) The tree is a vigorous grow- 
er. The fruit is attractively 
colored with red, oval in shape. The flesh is white, almost 
free. Ripens just before Carman. Cumberland continues to 
gain in popularity in all peach sections. 
GOLDEN JUBILEE ‘) 
A PROVEN MONEY MAKER 
No General Planting of Peaches is Complete Without A 
Liberal Amount of Golden Jubilee Trees. See Color Illus- 
tration Outside Back Cover Page. 
A development of the New Jersey Experiment Station first 
offered by us during Fall shipping season of 1988. Planted 
and producing in every peach producing section of the 
United States and Canada and stands without an equal as 
an early, yellow, freestone peach of exceptional quality. 
The Golden Jubilee is a second generation seedling of the 
Elberta crossed with the Greensboro. The tree is unusually 
hardy. The buds resist low winter temperatures better than 
Elberta and open later than Elberta which insures a reg- 
ular crop. The blossoms are _ self-fertile. The peach is 
medium to large in size. The peach develops better if a 
well balanced fertilizer is used. As the tree grows older 
the fruit becomes firmer and develops more naturally. Rip- 
ens about three to four weeks before Elberta. 
NOTE: GOLDEN JUBILEE—Trees available on Nematode 
Resistant Root Stock. $ .10 extra per tree. See page 20. 
THE FAIRHAVEN PEACH (4) 
A recent introduction from South Haven Experiment 
Station. 
Recommended for trial to lengthen Golden Jubilee Season 
and precede Halehaven. 
Fairhaven is a cross between J. H. Hale and South Haven. 
Trees have shown no weakness to date and are vigorous 
and productive. 
Fairhaven has the same tendency for heavy fruit setting 
as Halehaven and Redhaven, but produces larger size fruit 
than these two varieties. 
Fruits of Fairhaven are medium to large, round, bright 
golden color with attractive red cheek. 
Skin smooth and tough. Fruit firm and ships well. The 
flesh is medium yellow with moderate amount of red around 
the pit, moderately fine textured and good flavor. It resists 
browning which is of great advantage in processing. A 
freestone. : 
We recommend the variety for testing in a moderate way. 
Trees limited for this season. 
An early, oval, red all 
TRIOGEM (N.]J. 70) (5) over, firm, yellow free- 
stone peach ripening usually about two days after Golden 
Jubilee or 20 to 25 days before Elberta. The trees are med- 
ium in size, hardy and heavy bearers. Trees require good 
soil and good culture for best results. 
For the past several years Triogem has fruited over a wide 
area and has gained in popularity due to heavy yields and 
good marketing traits. Hardiness of tree has been another 
faetor for its increased popularity. It is well to remember 
however the tree needs heavy feeding and a good spray 
program for best results. 
ountiful Ridge 
PEACH Treas 
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RADIANCE (5a) A N. J. Station product. A seed- 
ling of Belle crossed with Greens- 
boro. A large, oval, white-fleshed freestone similar in form 
to Belle of Georgia; good quality and color. It is proving a 
very good variety ' . 
By popular request from growers Wwe again are growing 
and listing this variety. 
FAIR BEAUTY >) 
HARDINESS—GREAT BEAUTY—HIGH QUALITY 
recommended this peach for most all sections. Unrivaled 
as an early canning variety. 
An early peach following Golden Jubilee three to five 
days. Tree vigorous, spreading, very hardy in bud, often 
producing a crop when other varieties are winter killed. 
Fruit is medium to large in size, a deep golden yellow 
blushed with bright red, the flesh is firm, tender, melting 
and juicy. Fruit hangs exceptionally well to tree and when 
full ripe is a perfect freestone, clinging slightly when the 
peach is hard ripe, an excellent market and canning peach. 
COLORA PEACH ©) 
An Outstanding Hardy, Early, Yellow Freestone Peach. 
High Color, Superb Quality, Size and Hardiness Are Rea- 
sons Why You Should Plant Colora. Introduced in 1936. 
Our own introduction of a new frost resistant, yellow free- 
stone peach. Second generation trees as well as the original 
branch have withstood temperatures during the past winters 
of about 17 degrees below zero, when most other varieties 
such as Elberta, Hiley Belle, Belle of Georgia, Early Elberta 
and J. H. Hale were wiped out by these low temperatures. 
The peach is an attractive yellow, freestone, well-colored 
and of excellent quality, ripening about 15 to 20 days before 
Elberta. Just after Golden Jubilee. 
_Despite the fact that competition from other varieties 
ripening in the same season the Colora peach continues to 
gain in popularity in many sections of the country and we 
have sold out on trees early each year in spite of increased 
production. 
The variety is almost immune to cold and produces crops 
when all others are frozen out adds greatly to its popularity. 
VEDETTE 4) 
A product of the Vineland Experimental Station, Canada, 
proving unusually well adapted in the various peach grow- 
ing sections of the United States. A seedling of Elberta, 
resembling that variety in color and type of flesh but is 
more globular in shape, more highly colored, and of finer 
quality. The fruit is yellow fleshed, freestone. The tree is 
vigorous, very hardy, comes into bearing early and is very 
productive. 
NEWDAY (N.J 79) (5e) A large, oval, yellow- 
, ope fleshed peach which be- 
gins to ripen a few days after Triogem. ‘The tree is some- 
what more vigorous and the fruit averages larger which 
makes the variety somewhat easier to grow for market. The 
fruit is showy, firm in texture and hangs to the tree well. 
The growers demand we again grow and list this variety. 
It is a good one for many sections. 
GOLDEN GLOBE (NJ. 73) ©) 
Where the market demands a large peach this variety 
meets that demand. It is a very large, showy yellow peach 
of delicious flavor. Fruit hangs well to the tree. The tree 
is vigorous, upright and spreading. Fruit buds are some- 
what tender under certain conditions. Usually a freestone. 
SUNHIGH (N.J. 82) (6) A. large, red, bright, 
smooth peach which col- 
ors well all over before it ripens, softens slowly, making it 
a good commercial peach. Flesh inclines to adhere to the 
pit when hard ripe, but is generally freestone. The tree is 
Spreading in growth and the dormant buds are hardy. The 
variety seems to do best in hilly sections and requires 
thorough summer spraying. 
SOUTHLAND (6a) 
A promising new yellow fleshed variety that looks very 
good to precede Halehaven. Don’t miss out on this one. 
The Southland has lived up to all predictions made for it. 
New Yellow Fleshed variety ripening in Hiley season. 
Released by the U. S. D. A. July, 1946, and tested under 
No. FV 4-155. Southland is a seedling of Halehaven selfed. 
It ripens about with Hiley or 16 days before Elberta. The 
fruit is a freestone, medium to large size, round and has 
little fuzz. The color is attractive with a light-red blush 
covering about half the peach at shipping ripe stage. The 
flesh is yellow, firm, slow softening, medium textured, good 
fiavor. The trees are vigorous and productive, blossoms 
large and self fertile. 
HILEY BELLE (6B) Like Elberta the Hiley Belle con- 
: , tinues to hold a place which is 
unique in the peach world and its popularity is unquestioned. 
It is a medium size white freestone peach of Georgia Belle 
type ripening two weeks earlier or about with Halehaven. 
_ Because of its fine quality and flavor, plus beauty of color 
it has been planted commercially and in home orchards for 
many years. 
