. Germain : [catalog]. QUINCES Prices 35 cents each. $ per 10APPLE OR ORANGE. Large, fine golden yellow color. Fine for preserves or flavoring, productive and popular. The variety most largely cultivated. Fruit yellow, large and handsome, bears early. and is more productive than the above. Cooks tender and is of excellent Originated by Luther Burbank. The result of extensive experiments to secure a quince that would cook tender like an apple. The name comes from its flavor, which is suggestive of the Pineapple. Makes an elegant jelly, or can be eaten r


. Germain : [catalog]. QUINCES Prices 35 cents each. $ per 10APPLE OR ORANGE. Large, fine golden yellow color. Fine for preserves or flavoring, productive and popular. The variety most largely cultivated. Fruit yellow, large and handsome, bears early. and is more productive than the above. Cooks tender and is of excellent Originated by Luther Burbank. The result of extensive experiments to secure a quince that would cook tender like an apple. The name comes from its flavor, which is suggestive of the Pineapple. Makes an elegant jelly, or can be eaten raw. Late Fruit very large, of lemon color. A delicious flavor and very tender when cooked. Being a strong grower and heavy bearer with heavy foliage, especially adapted to the interior valleys. One of the best keepersVAN DEM AN. (See cut) largest and best quince on the market. Flesh yellow and very fine for canning: 35 and 50 cents each. BERRY PLANTS. MAMMOTH BLACKBERRIES CRANDALLS EARLY. Ever-bearing, large and firm: goodflavor, bears the entire season, ripens early, one of the dozen, 50 cents, $ per 100. HIMALAYA GIANT. A remarkable grower, canes growing40 feet in a single season. It should be trained on a trellis;a tremendous bearer and good shipper. Very few canning and jams it has few equals and is also a finetable fruit; 15 cents each, $ per dozen. $ per 100. MAMMOTH BLACKBERRY. A mammoth in growth and un-like any other blackberry plant. In a favorable season it hasattained a growth of 20 feet. The foliage is large and thickand of a deep green color. Fruit is enormously large, someberries being 2% to 234 inches long; ripens three weeksbefore other kinds. Of delicious flavor and sure to become agreat favorite. To obtain the best results plant upon a trellis,which should be set 10 feet apart and set the plants 6 to 8 feetin the rows, 10 cents each, 75 cents per dozen, $ per


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1912