. Packard's seed and plant hustler, 1896 : containing thoroughly reliable information ablut crimson clover, winter oats, cow peas, seed corn, for ensilage and fodder and the money growing varieties of strawberries, raspberries, Nursery stock Delaware Catalogs; Crimson clover Catalogs; Oats Catalogs; Cowpea Catalogs; Corn Catalogs; Berries Catalogs. 6. WOOLVERTON. WOOLVERTON is a splendid grower and an abundant bearer. Wherever it has been tested it has proved very satis- factory. The fruit is large resembling Bubach No. 5 in form, color bright red and of good quality. The blossom is per-


. Packard's seed and plant hustler, 1896 : containing thoroughly reliable information ablut crimson clover, winter oats, cow peas, seed corn, for ensilage and fodder and the money growing varieties of strawberries, raspberries, Nursery stock Delaware Catalogs; Crimson clover Catalogs; Oats Catalogs; Cowpea Catalogs; Corn Catalogs; Berries Catalogs. 6. WOOLVERTON. WOOLVERTON is a splendid grower and an abundant bearer. Wherever it has been tested it has proved very satis- factory. The fruit is large resembling Bubach No. 5 in form, color bright red and of good quality. The blossom is per- fect and remains in bloom a long time, and of great value to fertilize other mid- season varieties. Originated by John Little, the great strawberry grower of Canada. One of the best to plant with pistillate varieties. Plant largely of Woolverton. Price per dozen post paid 25c, 50c per 100, $ per 1000 by express not prepaid. GANDY—This is the standard very late berry everywhere. It grows to the largest size, is magnificiently colored, ranks as a strictly fancy berry and com- mands the highest price on every market Men have made and are making fortunes on this berry alone. Price per dozen post paid 25c; 60c per 100, $3 per 1000 by express not prepaid. BRANDYWINE is one of the most valuable varieties ever sent out, &nd seems destined to become as popular as Bu- bach No. 5. On the originators grounds in Pennsylvania last season, one single picking from 1| acres gave 1650 quarts. Says the editor of the Rural New Yorker who has fruited it three years: ktOf immense size and fine quality, quite firm and shapely for so large a berry, foliage of the largest and thriftiest,entirely free from scald or blemish, heavy peduncles. The average size is as large as any raised, and the shape is more uni- formly good than that of any other of the largest varieties. In general it is heart shap- ed, often broadly so without neck. Its most pronounced irregularity inclines toward the Sharple


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookyear1896