Archive image from page 148 of Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches cyclopediaofamer04bail4 Year: 1900 2211. Small form of Rubus villosus. the northern Dewberry. Crenerally known as IL Canadensis. No. 32. and few short scattered prickles; the fruit is fully as large or larger than Shaffer's Colossal Raspberry,


Archive image from page 148 of Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising. Cyclopedia of American horticulture, comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches cyclopediaofamer04bail4 Year: 1900 2211. Small form of Rubus villosus. the northern Dewberry. Crenerally known as IL Canadensis. No. 32. and few short scattered prickles; the fruit is fully as large or larger than Shaffer's Colossal Raspberry, of a purplish wine or mulbei-ry color, and of excellent quality, though the berries do not separate from the receptacle as freely as they shoiild; it is a very promising berry-plant.' See Burbank's 'New Creations in Fruits and Flowers,' June, 1894; also Gn. 48, p. 126. The picture represents a vei-y rugose leaf with 5 shallow nearly rounded lobes and very irregularly serrate margins: stems with curved prickles, and a small cluster with large, globular short-pedicelled fruits. It is probably R. Moluccanus. —, Veitch. Known to horticulturists in its varie- gated form ( tricolor): slender trailer, with rose- colored stems and petioles: Ivs. ovate, mostly indistinctly 3- lobed, very sharply toothed, the youngest ones pinkish white and the mature ones blotched green and white. Not known to be in cult, in this counti-y. It would probably not be hardy north. The botanical position of the plant is not designated. III. 16:95. , III. 29:60. —R. Moluccanns, Linn. A large Raspberry, common in India and Malaya, and to be expected as an introduced plant in many warm countries. Very robust, the canes and branches red-hairy and spiny: Ivs. very variable, large, usually hairy, dull-pubescent beneath. shallowly 3-5-lobed, irregularly serrate: tis. white, in con- tracted terminal clusters: fr. in shades of red, succulent. 6:461.—i2. stclldtus Smit


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