; PLUMS... MaloneyA Low Heading Varieties 
PRICES OF scanned hte Webra 
hoi f Varieties, ike or Assorted. 
Your Choice o rie is 13-28 36-50 
Each Each Each 
2-yr., 5-6 ft. tall . 4 $2.00 $1.85 $1.65 
2-yr., 4-5 ft. tail : 1.80 1.60 1.40 
2-yr., 3-4 ft. tall 4 1.55 1.30 1.10 
Growers please write for special low prices where quantity lots are desired. 
The dates after varieties indicate the keeping season of the fruit. 
All of the Pear and Plum varie- 
ties propagated and now growing 
in Maloney Brothers Nursery, 
Dansville, New York, have been 
examined by the Massachusetts 
Trueness-to-Name Inspection Ser- 
vice. To the best of our knowledge, 
these trees are true-to-name as 
they now stand in the nursery row. 
A. P. French 
Bradshaw 
Self-fruitful* group includes Fel- 
lenberg, Stanley, Reine Claude, Yel- 
low Egg and Shropshire Damson. 
Self-unfruitful group that requires 
cross pollination includes Bradshaw, 
Imperial Gage and Lombard. These 
three, however, when planted to- 
gether will pollinate each other. 
JAPANESE VARIETIES 
SS ABUNDANCE. One of the best Japan Plums. Tree grows rapidly, is healthy, cornes into bearing re- 
markably young and yields abundantly. Fruit medium size, amber with markings of red; juicy, 
sweet. August. 
BURBANK. Large, round, red variety, full crop every year. Trees bear heavily, often need thinning. 
Tasty, yellow flesh; fine, firm texture. Early August. 
They are self-unfruitful and two varieties such as Abundance and Burbank are best planted to- 
gether to assure a crop. Japanese varieties, since they bloom earlier, are not suited as pollinators for 
European varieties. 
EUROPEAN VARIETIES 
‘BRADSHAW. Very large and fine early Plum, dark violet-red, juicy and good. Very productive. Valu- 
able for market. Late August. 
“FELLENBERG PRUNE. (Italian. ) The most popular commercial Prune. Valuable for dessert, for mar- 
ket and drying or preserving. Fruit large, dark purple with blue bloom, oval, pointed and tapering. 
: Flesh is juicy and delicious, separating freely from the stone. Late September. 
“IMPERIAL GAGE. Large, greenish. Middle of August. l-yr. only. 
*~LOMBARD. Handsome reddish Plum. Flesh yellow, juicy, pleasant. An excellent variety and can be 
relied upon for a crop when other varieties fail. Late September. 
“SHROPSHIRE DAMSON. Productive dark purple. Early October. 
STANLEY PRUNE. (New.) Introduced by New York Experimental 
Station. Large, Prune-shaped; dark blue becoming bluish black. 
Flesh greenish yellow, juicy, fine grained, sweet. Freestone. 
Mid-September. 
YELLOW EGG. A Icte ripening, large, golden yel- 
low fruit. Excellent for cooking, and eating 
fresh from the tree. The largest and the hand- 
somest of all yellow Plums. September. 
Stanley 
New HOWARD'S 
MIRACLE PLUM 
(Patented) 
The fruit averages 2 in. in di- 
ameter. Flavor similar to Nectarine, 
Peach and Plum mixed. Delicious in 
preserves. Fruit ripens July and Au- 
gust. May be grown in small garden. 
Does not need pollenization; excep- 
Ss : tionally hardy. Price: 4-6 ft., $2.50 
each. 
Howard's Miracle Plum = “— 
eit Ho Dt 
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