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SYSTEMATIC POMOLOGY. 



ments small, converging. Core oblate, clasping, medium; seeds 

 numerous, plump, medium, brown; flesh yellowish, fine, tender, juicy, 

 subacid, very good. Winter. (U. S. Div. of Pomology, 1902.) 



Oconee. Origin, bank of Oconee River, near Athens, Georgia, 

 tree vigorous and productive. 



Fruit large; form roundish-flattened; surface yellow, a little 

 brownish in the sun; dots few, russet; cavity rather regular, deep, 

 russeted; stem short; basin shallow, slightly furrowed ; calyx open; 

 flesh yellowish, fine-grained, crisp, abounding in a delightful aromatic, 

 lively, subacid juice, good to very good. October to November. 



Ogle (Winter Snoiv}. Origin, Illinois. 



Fruit medium, oblate, slightly oblique; skin thin, tenacious; 

 surface smooth, except for raised dots and fine leather-cracking, 



Ohio Nonpareil. 



yellowish, washed with scarlet and striped with dark crimson; dots 

 conspicuous, yellow, protruding, some areole; cavity wide, deep, 

 flaring, russet-netted; stem about one inch long, slender, with bracts; 

 basin large, regular, deep, abrupt, corrugated, and lined with bloorn: 

 calyx small, closed; segments long, narrow, converging or reflexed. 

 Core medium, roundish, clasping, partially open; seeds numerus, 



