132 THE APPLE. 



Court of Wick. Tliomp. Rond. 



Court of Wick Pippin. Idnd. P. Mag. 



Court de Wick. Hooker. 



Ivival Golden Pippin, 



Fry's Pippin, 



Golden Drop, 



Wood's Huntingdon, 



Transparent Pippin, 



Philip's Eeinette, 



Knightwick Pippin, 



Week's Pippin, 



Yellow, 



of various English nurseries. 



A tiglily flavoured Eiiglivsli dessert apple of the Golden Pippin 

 class, which does not succeed well with us. 



Fruit below the middle size, regularly formed, roundish-ovate, 

 somewhat flattened. Skin greenish yellow in the shade, but be- 

 coming a warm orange, with a little red, and dotted with small 

 russet brown specks in the sun. Flesh yellow, crisp, and juicy, 

 with a high, poignant flavour. October to February. 



Cranberry Pippin. 



This strikingly beautiful apple was found growing on a farm 

 near Hudson, N. Y. It is only second rate, in point of flavour — 

 about equal to Ilawthornden — but it is an excellent cooking 

 apple, and its beautiful appearance and great productiveness, will, 

 we think, render it a popular variety for market. 



Fruit above medium size, very regularly formed, a little flat- 

 tened. Skin very smooth, of a fine clear yellow in the shade, 

 with a briglit scarlet cheek. Flesh white, moderately juicy, 

 with a mild, sub-acid flavour. November to February. 



Cracking. 



Origin, farm of Henry Barger, Harrison county, Ohio. Tree 

 vigorous and productive, highly esteemed where known. 



Fruit fair, large, roundish, slightly flattened, inclining to conic, 

 angular. Skin fair fine yellow, with a slight tinge of red, thinly 

 sprinkled with large green dots. Stem short, in a rather deep 

 cavity. Calyx closed in a corrugated basin. Flesh yellowish 

 white, crisp, tender, juicy, and excellent. October to January. 



CULP. 



Origin, Jefferson county, Ohio. Introduced by Georg Culp. 



Fruit medium, angular, irregularly conic. Skin waxen yel- 

 low, shaded with blush or dull crimson, thickly sprinkled with 

 light dots. Stalk short, inserted in a broad, deep cavity, sur- 

 rounded by thin russet. Calyx closed, basin uneven. Flesh 



