484 THE PLUMS OF NEW YORK. 



Received by the United States Department of Agriculture from H. C. Cook, White 

 Salmon, Washington. Fruit large, roundish-oval; stem short, set in a moderately 

 deep, abrupt cavity; red, a little darker than Lombard; bloom thin; dots numerous; 

 flesh pale yellow; good to very good; stone large, oval, free; late. 

 Lewiston Egg. Domestica. i. Downing Fr. Trees Am. 404. 1857. -2. Am. Pom. 

 Soc. Cat. 222, 244. 1858. Lewiston's Egg 2. 



According to Downing, from Lewiston, New York. Tree vigorous, productive; 

 fruit medium, oval, pale yellow; flesh yellow, not very sweet; flavor medium; cling- 

 stone; mid-season. Rejected by the American Pomological Society in 1858. 

 Lex Plum. Domestica. i. Kenrick Am. Orch. 263. 1832. 



Noted as a large blue plum with rich, sweet, yellow flesh; very productive. 

 Liegel Rote Damascene. Species? Mentioned in Mathieu Norn. Pom. 439. 1889. 



Runde Rote Damascene. 



Liegel Apricot. Domestica. i. Hogg Fruit Man. 369. 1866. 2. Mathieu Nom. Pom. 

 439. 1889. 3. Guide Prat. 163, 351. 1895. 



Abricotee de Braunau Nouvelle i, 2. Abricote'e de Liegel 3. New Apricot of 

 Braunau 2. 



Liegel Apricot was grown by Dr. Liegel of Braunau, Germany. Fruit of medium 

 size, roundish; suture deep; yellowish; bloom thin; flesh greenish-yellow, melting, 

 juicy, sprightly; good; freestone; late. 

 Liegel Gage. Domestica. i. Mathieu Nom. Pom. 439. 1889. 2. Guide Prat. 161, 359. 1895. 



A variety said to have been imported into France from England. Fruit of medium 

 size, roundish, greenish; bloom thin; flesh yellow, juicy, rich; very good; late. 

 Liegel Unvergleichliche. Domestica? i. Mathieu Nom. Pom. 439. 1889. 2. Guide 

 Prat. 162, 359. 1895. 



Received in France from Bohemia. 



Lillian Augusta. Domestica. i. Ont. Fr. Gr. Assoc. Rpt. 72. 1894. 2. Can. Exp. 

 Farms Rpt. 136. 1894. 



Grown by Richard Trotter, Owen Sound, Ontario. Tree hardy, productive; fruit 

 large, egg-shaped; cavity small and shallow; stem nearly long; suture a line; greenish- 

 yellow with a few broken stripes of deeper shade ; flesh light yellow, firm, meaty, juicy, 

 slightly acid; good to very good; stone medium to small, oval, turgid, roughened, 

 partly free. 

 Lillie. Americana, i. la. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 276. 1893. 2. Waugh Plum Cult. 156. 1901. 



A seedling of Hawkeye, grown by H. A. Terry, Crescent, Iowa; first fruited in 

 1893. Tree vigorous and upright; fruit of medium size, round sometimes conical; 

 cavity broad, shallow; stem slender; apex rounded; yellow overspread with mottled 

 light and dark red; dots numerous; bloom thick; flesh sweet, melting; quality best; 

 stone pointed, free; mid-season. 

 Lindow'sche Fruhe Werder'sche Pflaume. Species? Mentioned in Mathieu Nom. 



Pom. 439. 1889. 

 Lindsay. Species? i. Can. Hort. 27:22. 1904. Lindsay's Seedling i. 



Reported as a new plum from Guelph, Canada; large; good. 



