STATE HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. (is 
Mr. Underwood was not aware that the Orange would blight. 
Thought it might do so under close proximity to blighting trees. 
Mr. Gould thought the Transcendent had many good points and 
would plant it. 
Mr. Latham said the Transcendent was the best crab on the 
entire list for his location. 
Mr. Fuller thought the Transcendent had had its day in the 
older settled portions of the State, but in the newer portions and 
in the extreme north it was yet needed. 
Mr. Pearce said that Whitney’s No. 20 and Power’s large red 
were both as good trees and as good fruit as the Transcendent, and 
that they were not at all liable to blight. 
The question was called, and the Transcendent and Hyslop were 
stricken from the list by a vote of fourteen for, and ten against. 
The list for general cultivation was then adopted as follows: 
Beaches Sweet, Orange, Early Strawberry, Whitney’s No. 20, 
and Minnesota. 
The motion to place the Transecendent upon the list for plant- 
ing in localities where not subject to blight, prevailed, seventeen 
for, fourteen against. 
For planting in limited quantities, the committee recommended 
Conical, Hesper Blush, Virginia, which report was adopted. 
As varieties qnite exempt from blight, the committee presented 
Orange, Beaches Sweet, Conical, Whitney’s No. 20, Minnesota, 
Karly Strawberry, which were accepted. 
As lable to blight, Transcendent. 
GRAPES—GENERAL PLANTING. 
Concord, Deleware and Janesville. The Janesville recommend- 
ed especially for its earliness, adopted. 
For planting in limited quantities, Worden, Champion, Rogers 
No. 15 and 19, Brighton and Lady, adopted. 
Moore’s Karly recommended for trial. 
RASPBERRIES—GENERAL PLANTING. 
Black Caps. Doolittle, Seneca, Mammoth Cluster. 
Red. Philadelphia, Turner. Adopted. 
CURRANTS. 
Red. Red Dutch, Victoria. 
