. E. Fred Washburn's amateur cultivator's guide to the flower & kitchen garden for 1880 . ^ASHBUKN'S Moore's Early Concord Sweet. Stalks stroncr, stocky and vigorous, gro-wing from seven to seven and a half feet high. Ears large, and set rather close on the stalk, and having from twelve to twenty rows on the ear. Color, when fit for the table, very white and handsome; a superior variety, either for the market or family use, and very productive; it matures earlier than any other variety of equal size, which makes it verv desirable for the market garden. The Massachusetts Horticultural So- c
. E. Fred Washburn's amateur cultivator's guide to the flower & kitchen garden for 1880 . ^ASHBUKN'S Moore's Early Concord Sweet. Stalks stroncr, stocky and vigorous, gro-wing from seven to seven and a half feet high. Ears large, and set rather close on the stalk, and having from twelve to twenty rows on the ear. Color, when fit for the table, very white and handsome; a superior variety, either for the market or family use, and very productive; it matures earlier than any other variety of equal size, which makes it verv desirable for the market garden. The Massachusetts Horticultural So- ciety awarded Mr. Moore the Society's silver medal for the production of this superior variety. Select ears, 15 cents; perpkt., 10 cents Potter's Excelsior Sweet. This variety was originated at the Ehode Island Seed Gardens in East Providence, and in many respects is unequalled by any variety now in cultivation for sweetness and delicious qualitvor an early variety. Size, medium: equal to any for earliness; and a better corn for family use, to be grown in small areas of a kitchen garden, can hardly be desired. Per pkt., 10 cents " .
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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggilbertnurserya, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880