The peaches of New York . w, deepening towardthe tip; apex small, mucronate, roundish or somewhat depressed; color creamy-whiteblushed with carmine deepened by a few dark splashes; pubescence short, thin; skin thin,tough, separating from the pulp; flesh white, rayed with red near the pit, very juicy,tender and melting, sweet, with a pleasant sprightliness; good in quality; stone semi-freeto free, one and three-eighths inches long, fifteen-sixteenths inch wide, obovate, plump,abruptly pointed, with corrugated and pitted surfaces; ventral suture wide, winged, deeplyfurrowed along the edges; dors


The peaches of New York . w, deepening towardthe tip; apex small, mucronate, roundish or somewhat depressed; color creamy-whiteblushed with carmine deepened by a few dark splashes; pubescence short, thin; skin thin,tough, separating from the pulp; flesh white, rayed with red near the pit, very juicy,tender and melting, sweet, with a pleasant sprightliness; good in quality; stone semi-freeto free, one and three-eighths inches long, fifteen-sixteenths inch wide, obovate, plump,abruptly pointed, with corrugated and pitted surfaces; ventral suture wide, winged, deeplyfurrowed along the edges; dorsal suture a deep, narrow groove. MAMIE ROSS I. Can. Hort. 17:346. 1894. 2. Tex. Sla. Bui. 39:807, 808 fig. 8. 1896. 3. Ga. Sla. Bui. 42 4. Am. Pom. Soc. Cat. 33. 1899. 5. Del. Sta. Rpl. 13:104, 105. 1901. 6. Budd-Hansen ^ Man. 2:351. 1903. 7. Waugh Am. Peach Orch. 205. 1913. Mamie Ross seems to have a very good reputation as a table andmarket peach in Texas and other parts of the South but is hardly worth. )/ LOLA


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpub, booksubjectfruitculture