426 THE PEACHES OF NEW YORK 



New White Rareripe, i. Land. Hort. Soc. Cat. 103. 1831. 



Listed but not described. 

 New York Early Lemon Clingstone, i. Land. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 6:413, 414. 1826. 



A seedling of the Lemon Clingstone; fruit larger and ripens a fortnight earlier than 

 that of its parent. 

 Newhall. i. Wickson Cal. Fruits 313. 1889. 



Sylvester Newhall, San Jose, California, was the originator of this variety; tree hardy, 

 vigorous, not affected by leaf -curl; fruit large; flesh deep yellow, juicy, vinous, rich; ripens 

 a week before Late Crawford. 

 Newman, i. Cole Am. Fr. Book 194. 1849. 



A seedling from Charles Newman, Reading, Massachusetts; fruit large, round; flesh 

 white, juicy, melting, sweet; ripens the last of September. 



Newington (of America), i. Lond. Hort. Soc. Cat. 100. 1831. 2. Ga. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 

 25. 1876. 



This is an unproductive clingstone ripening at the end of September. The glands 

 are globose and the fruit is of first size but the sort is unworthy cultivation. 

 Nicarde. i. Baltet Cult. Fr. 238. 1908. 



A variety grown in France. 

 Nichols. I. Am. Pom. Soc. Cat. 38. 1909. 



Nichols Orange Cling. 2. Wickson Cal. Fruits 314. 1889. 



This is a productive clingstone which originated with Joseph Nichols, Niles, California. 

 In 1909 it gained a place on the fruit-list of the American Pomological Society. 

 Nicholson Smock, i. Del. Sta. Rpt. 5:99. 1892. 



Grown on the Delaware Station grounds. 

 Nicols Beauty, i. Peachland Nur. Cat. 14. 1892. 



A large, yellow variety from Deknar, Delaware, according to the Peachland Nurseries, 

 Seaford, Delaware. 

 Nina Cling, i. Harrison Cat. 18. 1910. 



According to J. G. Harrison and Sons, Berlin, Maryland, Nina Cling is a yellow peach 

 of high quality ripening about the middle of August. 



Nivette. i. Langley Pomona 103, 104, PI. XXX fig. IV. 1729. 2. Prince Pom. Man. 

 1:196, 197. 1831. 3. Poiteau Pom. Franc. i:No. 24, PI. 1846. 



Nivette Veloutie. 4. Duhamel Trait. Arb. Fr. 2:39, 40, PI. 28. 1768. 5. Mas Le 

 Verger 7:135, 136, fig. 66. 1866-73. 6. Leroy Diet. Pom. 6:197, 198 fig-. 199. 



1879. 



White Rareripe. 7. Horticulturist 1:210, 258. 1846-47. 



The origin of Nivette is unknown. It is a very old variety and seems to have been 

 popular in the Old World for many years. In America, where it was first known early 

 in the Nineteenth Century, it became confused with Morris White. The distinguishing 

 characters between the two are : Morris White has renif orm glands and white flesh while 

 Nivette has globose glands and flesh which is red at the pit. Tree vigorous, upright, 

 productive; fruit large, roundish, more or less elongated, flattened a little at the base, 

 having a distinct suture, which so divides the fruit that one side is more projecting than 



