PEARS. 429 



depression. Flesh, whitish, crisp, juicy, sweet, and with a musky 

 flavour. 



A dessert pear ; ripe in August. Tree succeeds well as a standard ; 

 it bears but indifferently when young, but as it becomes aged it is more 

 fertile. 



Culot. See Donville. 

 Cure. See Vicar of Winkfield. 

 Cypress. See Early Romselet. 

 Dauphin. See Lansac. 

 Davy. See Flemish Beauty. 

 Dean's. See White Doyenne. 

 D'Abondance. See Ah ! Man Dieu. 

 D'Amour. See Ah ! Mon Dieu. 



DEARBORN'S SEEDLING. — Fruit, small; turbinate. Skin, 

 smooth, of a pale yeUow colour, strewed with small russety dots. Eye, 

 large and open, set in a shallow depression. Stalk, long and slender, 

 inserted in a small cavity. Flesh, white, very juicy and melting, sweet, 

 and pleasantly flavoured. 



An early pear of American origin ; ripe in August. 



D'Arenberg. See Colmar d'Aremberg. 



D'Auch. See Colmar. 



De Bavay. See Autumn Colmar. 



De Bordeaux. See Bed d'Hery. 



De Bure. See Bellissime d'Hiver. 



De Cadet. See Beryamotte Cadette. 



De Cambron. See Glou Morgeau. 



De Chameux. See Fondante de Charneu. 



De Chypre. See Early Bousselet. 



Defays. See Doyenne Defais. 



De Finois. See Angleterre. 



De Fosse. See Jargonelle. 



De Glace. See Yirgouleuse. 



De Kienzheim. See Vallee Franehe. 



De la Motte. See Besi de la Matte. 



De Lavault. See Williams' Bon Chretimi. 



Delbart. See Beurre d'Amanlis. 



De Legipont. See Fondante de Charneu. 



Delfosse Bourgmestre. See Beurre Delfosse. 



