. Allen's descriptive catalogue of choice strawberry plants : grown and for sale by W. F. Allen, Jr. Nurseries (Horticulture) Maryland Salisbury Catalogs; Nursery stock Maryland Salisbury Catalogs; Strawberries Maryland Salisbury Catalogs. VAN DEMAN. is darker in color, both fruit igorous grower, with strong and healthy foliage, that niuch resembles the Lovett in plant and habit, and is remarkably productive under favorable conditions. It has recieved much praise from the experiment stations. The berries are conical, and deep glossy scarlet in color, firm, and of sprightly sub-acid flavor. Ear


. Allen's descriptive catalogue of choice strawberry plants : grown and for sale by W. F. Allen, Jr. Nurseries (Horticulture) Maryland Salisbury Catalogs; Nursery stock Maryland Salisbury Catalogs; Strawberries Maryland Salisbury Catalogs. VAN DEMAN. is darker in color, both fruit igorous grower, with strong and healthy foliage, that niuch resembles the Lovett in plant and habit, and is remarkably productive under favorable conditions. It has recieved much praise from the experiment stations. The berries are conical, and deep glossy scarlet in color, firm, and of sprightly sub-acid flavor. Early. GEN. PUTNAM.—Resembles Cumberland closely in both plant and fruit. Strong plant and bright clean foliage. Berries large, round- ish conical, pale scarlet, rather soft, but of high quality. Mid-season. GREAT PACIFIC is. I believe, a valuable early market berry. It is as early as Crescent and quite as productive with the advantage of ripen- ing up twice as much iruit at the first pickings. The fruit is also much larger and will equal Haverland in size, vigor and productiveness, but nd oliage. A valuable variety. It is also CRAWFORD.—It is a line large berry, firm and of good quality, a sturdy, healthy grow but is not produc- tive on poor sandy soil. When given high culture it is one of the best. MINEOLA.—Highly recommended for family use. It is not very productive but it is of large size and its quality is good enough to make up for what it lacks in productiveness. WILSON.—too well known to need description. We have some fine healthy plants that are strictly pure. SWINDLE.—The plant in habit of somewhat resembles the Glendale. al- though with rather broader leaves; it is a more vigorous grower than either of its parents, and makes runners freely: leaf and fruit stalks are long and stout, fruit CRAWFORD. stalks very abundant and branch freely, so that often thirty or fifty berries form on a single cluster; blossom pistillate, blooms medium to late, iruit ripens late


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookyear1895