MEME OIANADO lll wg ge 1085 days 
Fruits: Similar to regular BANANA except exterior is deep pink. 
Flesh: Thick, solid, free from fiber, orange yellow, sweet. 
TABLE QUEEN (DES MOINES, ACORN, YAMA) . . 90-100 days 
Fruits: 5-6” long, 4-412” largest diameter, weigh 1-1! lbs., acorn shape 
with prominent ribbing, very dark greenish black; smooth, fairly thin 
skin. 
Flesh: Thin, pale orange to deep yellow, tender, fairly dry and sweet with 
good flavor. Old variety popular as individual baker; keeps fairly well. 
UCONN Gold Medal 1950. 
Fruits: ACORN Or TABLE QUEEN type, green skin, yellow flesh, but ridges 
more rounded than TABLE QUEEN. 
Plant: Bush type, occupying a space about 3 x 3’. 
Yield: 9 plants should produce a bushel of mature fruits. 
Developed by Dr. L. C. Curtis, this variety should appeal where space 
is limited. 
M@ERRENSTURBAN ~ . . . .. . .) .) , 115-125 days 
Fruits: 8-10” long, 12-15” in diameter, weigh 14-20 lbs., drum shaped 
with distinct navel at blossom scar, bright reddish orange with scattered 
grayish striping at blossom end, navel is slatey blue; shell very hard, 
thick and heavily warted with fine warting. 
Flesh: Thick at sides and blossom end, very thick at stem end, bright 
orange, brittle, sweet, fairly dry, good flavor and quality. 
WARTED HUBBARD (CHICAGO WARTED HUBBARD) 110-120 days 
Fruits: 12-14” long, 10-12” largest diameter, weigh 12-15 lbs., large 
fruited IMPROVED HUBBARD with heavy warting. 
Flesh: Same as IMPROVED HUBBARD. 
TOMATO 
Lycopersicon esculentum 
RED FRUITED or YELLOW SKINNED, RED FLESHED VARIETIES 
SOMES ee ti(<‘“=i;i‘i‘“<*t;CS*;tSCSS:SCt*«‘<S;:SC«d AT days 
Fruits: Bright scarlet, medium size, average 442-512 oz., smooth, flat- 
tened globe with index about 0.75, small cored, solid flesh, free from 
circular cracking, although radial cracks are occasionally found; 5-7 
locules. 
Vines: Medium sized plants, medium amount of semi-erect and spreading 
foliage, giving fair coverage to fruit, medium green, productive. 
BOUNTY ee CE 60-70 days 
Fruits: Scarlet, medium small, average 414-434 ozZ., smooth, uniformly 
globular, with index about 1.00, shallow, small core, cracks under 
extreme variations of dry and wet weather, 4-5 locules; carries 
uniform ripening gene and consequently has no dark green color 
around stem. 
Vines: Very small, determinate, fair foliage, although poor coverage be- 
cause of prolific set. Of same parentage as vICToR but not the same; 
developed by Dr. A. F. Yeager and Mr. Harold Mattson of the North 
Dakota Agricultural Experiment Station. 
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