100 THE AITLK. 



apple for its fairness, larg-e size, and i^-ood bearing- qualities, either 

 for market or fatiudy use. Tree a healtliy, free grovver, niakiirir a 

 round head; an early and abundant bearer nearly every year. 



Fruit large, roundish conical, inclining to oblong, slightly angu- 

 lar; skin pale, greenish yello^v, or pale yello\v at full maturity, v.-ilh 



rear Pippin. 



many rather obscure light and green dots; stalk short to long, slen- 

 der; cayity large, deep, sometimes slia'ht russet; calyx closed; basin 

 larg-e, deep, slightly corrugated; flesh Avhitish, half fine, tender, 

 juicy, sprightly subacid, and good quality; core rather large. Sep- 

 tember. 



Peasgood's Noxksuch. 



This beautiful apple Avas raised by Mr. Peasgood, of Stamford, 

 England, and is a fine culinary or dessert apple, and is like a hanc'- 

 some and highly-colored Blenheim Pippin. 



Fruit large, roundish oblate; skin yellow, overspread on the 

 sunny side with red, and copiously streaked with bright darker 

 crimson streaks; stalk short, deeply inserted; eye very large and 

 ooen, set in a deep, round, and even basin; flesh yellowish, tender. 

 very juicy, with an agreeable acid flavor. September, October 

 (Mogg). 



Randolph Sweet. 



An accidental seedling on the farm of O. T. Hobbs, Randolph. 

 Pa. The tree is said to be vigorous, spreading; not an early, but a 

 good bearer annually, when it has attained sufficient age; it is a 

 late keeper. 



