in 



market at any given price, with so much 

 advantage to the cultivator. 



The Grange Apple. A fruit of great 

 beauty, and similar in colour to a very 

 fine golden pippin, it ripens early in 

 October, but remains sound till February: 

 it is the offspring of the orange pippin, 

 fertilized by the pollen of the golden 

 pippin. * 



The Bringewood Pippin. Its form 

 and character are those of a large and 

 flat golden pippin, with russet stripes : 

 it is a fruit of exquisitely fine flavour, and 

 keeps late, I have known it saved till 

 February, and the flavour not impaired 

 by keeping. 



The Worlmsley Pippin. This apple 

 ripens in the end of October, and many 

 of my friends think it the best apple of 

 its season : it is very large, and in the 



* Pomona Herefordiensis, and Mr. Knight in 

 Trans. Hort. Soc 



