1-6 7-12 13-25 
Each Each Each 
2-yr., 5-6 ft. $2.40 $2.25 $2.10 
2-yr., 4-5 ft. 2.00 1.80 1.60 
2-yr., 3-4 ft. 1.75 1.60 1.40 
Commercia! growers interested in 50 or more trees, please 
write for our Commercial Price List. 
Fruit is medium size, dark purple, produced in thick clusters. Good to eat out of 
hand when fully ripe or after a light frost. One of the best of its kind for culinary purposes. 
Tree a good grower and very productive. September 24-28. 
Trees are adaptable to wide range of soils and climates, and bear not 
only heavily but yearly. Fruit large, very early, amber turning to a rich, bright cherry. Flesh 
light yellow, very juicy and tender. Freestone. Good for canning. Should be picked when not 
quite ripe, as it ‘keeps better and taste develops better. August 15-20. Shiro Plum 
Fruit very large, bright reddish purple. Meaty and quite firm. Should be picked 
before entirely ripe. Best colored fruit attained when thinned on the trees. Trees are low 
growing, flat-topped with somewhat drooping branches. Productive and vigorous. Good 
shipper. Aug. 25-30. 4 
Also known as Italiae and German. Widely known and valuable 
Plum for dessert, but most esteemed for market and drying for preserves. Fruit is long, oval, 
purple with a thick bloom. Flesh firm, sweet and pleasant, separating freely from stone. 
Moderate growth, A great favorite and there is always a good market for them at profitable 
prices. September 24-26. 
A very promising Oriental variety. Fruit is handsome, dark reddish purple. 
Large with very juicy, red flesh of good quality. Tree is large, vigorous and moderately pro- 
ductive. Aug. 20-26. 
\ 
Has beautiful fruit, large, pale yellow, 
marked with red if the crop is thinned and sufficiently exposed to the sun. Trees attain only 
moderate size in the orchard, are productive and bear regularly. Deserves a place in the home 
orchard. September 25-30. 
A Golden Yellow Winner. A very early Plum. Beautiful golden yellow variety. Tree is 
low growing, hardy, very prolific. Excellent for cooking, canning and dessert use. People who 
like Plans Should be sure to plant this variety. Ripens Aug. te 
POLLINATION 
With the exception of the Prunes, Fellemberg, German, Stanley, etc., which are self-fruitful, 
Plums should be interplanted to insure a set of fruit—European varieties for pollinating that 
class and Oriental sorts for those varieties. 
Abundance, Burbank and Santa Rosa are Oriental varieties, balance are European varieties. 
Burbank 
Plum 
fey 
DANSVILLE, 
N. Y. 
A very large and fine early Plum. Attractive, dark violet A Better Kelly Prune 
skin with yellow flesh. Very juicy; excellent for dessert use The best for commercial planting or home use. Bears fruit in 3 years 
and for canning. The tree is hardy, and a vigorous grower. and ripens 10 days earlier than other varieties. Exceptionally productive. 
Especially desirable because of its ability to produce heavy Fruit large, deep bluish purple, firm and sweet; of excellent flavor. In- 
crops of delicious fruit annually. Bradshaw is recommended troduced by the New York State Experiment Station, and is becoming a 
for the home orchard as well as for the commercial grower. valuable commercial variety. Bears annually. Midseason. September 20-25. 
September 5-10. Same price as other Prune trees. 
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