LUTHER BURBANK 



Nor need attention be restricted to mere mat- 

 ters of fragrance and color. 



I have already suggested that it is usually well 

 to consider more than a single quality. Cases like 

 that of the heuchera leaf, in which for a special 

 purpose a single quality alone is considered, are 

 exceptional. As a rule, you may advantageously 

 bear in mind, at the same time that you are devel- 

 oping a new fragrance, the question also of color 

 of flower, and size, and form. 



At all events, so soon as your experiment has 

 reached the stage at which you have a nmnber of 

 fragrant flowers from which to select, all of which 

 have about the same excellence of perfume, you 

 will, as a matter of course, choose among these the 

 one that combines with fragrance the most desired 

 qualities of color and form and size of blossom. 

 Doubling the Petals and Increasing Size 



As to the matter of size, it is obvious that not 

 much need be said. A glance shows which plant 

 bears the largest flowers. And it may confidently 

 be expected that the offspring of this plant will 

 tend to produce flowers of exceptional size, and 

 that some among these will exceed the parent plant 

 in this regard. 



Precisely the same method of selecting, gen- 

 eration after generation, with size of flower always 

 in view, will lead to the production of a race of 



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