OBSOLETE AND INFERIOR VARIETIES. 275 



Mottled. Carpenter. Long since discarded. 



Naomi . Eicketts. Large, pale red ; vine unhealthy. 



Nebraska. Wilding. See page 104. 



Neosha. Wilding. From Missouri; good for 

 wine. 



Neverfail. Black, and very late. 



Newark. Medium black; subject to rot and 

 mildew. 



Newburg. Kicketts. Of doubtful value. 



New Haven. Too near Concord to be retained. 



Noah. Small, greenish-white; of no special value. 



Nonantum. Francis Dana. Very like Isabella. 



North America. Wild, black, fox grape. 



North Carolina. Very close to Isabella. 



Northern Muscadine. Wild, red, fox grape. 



Norton's Virginia. Southern. Sparingly culti- 

 vated for wine. 



Oberon. Campbell. Black ; vine tender. 



Ohio. Red ; and probably now unknown. 



Old Ford. A wild, red grape from N. 0. 



Onondaga. Very close to Delaware. 



Ontario. Same as Union Village. 



Oporto. Old, and worthless native variety. 



Oriental. Not sufficiently distinct to be preserved. 



Osage. Origin and merits in doubt. 



Osee. White ; recommended for wine only. 



Othello. Arnals' Hybrid. Black ; very late 



Pauline. Similar to Lenoir and Lincoln. 



Pauline. Miner. Similar to Antoinette; white. 



Peabody. Ricketts' Hybrid. May be valuable 

 South. 



Pearson's Ironclad. A. W. Pearson. Excellent 

 for wine. 



Perkins. Old, red, fox grape ; worthless. 



Peter Wylie. Dr. Wylie. Small, white ; foreign 

 parentage, succeeds best in the South. 



