TEXABERTA 
The Nation's Perfect Peach 
A perfect freestone that ripens about July 10. This outstanding peach 
has not missed a crop at Belton, Texas, since it was originated 24 years 
ago. Combine the best qualities of all peaches, add a few, and you 
have Texaberta. It has bright red, juicy flesh around the seed, form- 
ing into deep, tender yellow toward the bright red-covered skin. 
Delicious? — well, you just don’t know what good eating is until you 
have had the juice of a Texaberta running down your chin after a good 
bite. Texaberta produces in mild climates where Elberta is a failure 
—and —it is extra FROST-RESISTANT. Texaberta is sold only by 
Wolfe Nursery and is labelled with a RED stripe. 
PRICES: 
2 yr. Large Trees - $1.75 2 yr. Medium Trees - $1.25 
2 yr. Small Trees - $ .90 
MELBA 
By far our greatest find in an all-purpose, large, delicious, 
honey-hybrid peach. It is adapted from coast to coast and 
is the leader of all frost-resistant varieties. Our show 
orchard here at the nursery took 10 degrees below freezing 
while in full bloom and still produced a bumper crop. Melba 
starts ripening early in June and lasts most of July. No 
other peach ripens over such a Jong period. Never has a 
fruit variety received such unanimous acclaim as Melba. 
Not one person has failed to say, “That’s the best peach I 
ever tasted.” Melba, the Honey-Hybrid, Queen of all 
eating peaches, is labelled with two RED stripes. 
PRICES: 
2 yr. Large Trees - $2.00 2 yr. Medium Trees - $1.50 
All Plants 
ROBIRM © 
Girnst In The Spring 
This is the most valuable and extraordinary of all the new peach varieties because 
it is the first good peach of the season, ripening weeks before any other good early 
peach. That fact alone puts Robin in a class by itself. It is a beautiful red-cheeked, 
white-fleshed, medium-size fruit, semi-freestone, so richly colored and handsome that 
it will make your mouth water just to look at it. Deliciously flavored, the fruit is 
firm and smooth, almost fuzzless, round in shape. It keeps well after picking. In 
addition to ripening the first good Peaches of the season, Robin Trees bear enormous 
crops. They grow rapidly and bear fruit amazingly soon — sometimes the first year 
after planting. If you and your family want to enjoy the first good Peaches of the 
season, then you will have to include Robin in your home garden planting. Labelled 
WHITE over WHITE. PLANT PATENTED NUMBER 529 
PRICE: $2.00 - each 
PLANTING DISTANCES 
Give Plants Enough Room 
Planting distances between trees depend primarily upon the type 
of tree, its purpose, the amount of rainfall, and the fertility of the 
soil. For example, trees planted in East Texas and the South- 
eastern States may be planted closer together than those of West 
Texas and New Mexico, because of the greater rainfall in the 
Eastern section. 
To make allowance for these factors, the following distances are 
recommended: 
Apples, Pears, and Apricots . . . . . . ~~ . . 80 to 40 ft. apart 
Cherries, Plums, and Cherry-Plums . . ... . . . 20 to 25 ft. apart 
His se ae Pk sae at oe ce ae eae pe Lo’ CO 20, ft. apart 
Grapes wma Lok ed aT ake ene eke hL0sto! LG -ft.vapart 
Peaches and Persimmons . . . .. .- +--+ + ~ 20 to 30 ft. apart 
Pecans and Walnuts .. . . . . . 40 to 60 ft. apart 
Shade Trees — large growers: Chinese Elm 
and Sycamore Heaeccaiicnao. hacker e 
Medium to small growers: Mimosa, Red-bud, 
and Weeping Willow ...... . ~~ + 20 to 40 ft. apart 
These trees may be spaced closer together when planted in a 
single row or in yards. 
Dew-Black berries . . . , Plant 3 ft. apart in rows 6 ft. apart 
Rossberries and Thornless Boysenberries 
Plant 4 ft. apart in rows 6 ft. apart 
30 to 50 ft. apart 
