418 MANUAL OF GARDENING 
plant and choose those varieties which are the most successfully 
grown there,—choosing from amongst the successful kinds those 
which he likes best and which seem best to meet the purposes for 
which he is to grow them. 
For the northern and eastern states, the following varieties will 
generally be found valuable: — 
Early. — Yellow Transparent, Early Harvest, Early Strawberry, 
Primate, Dyer, Summer Rose, Early Joe, Red Astrachan, Golden 
Sweet, Oldenburg,* Summer Pearmain, Williams (Favorite), Chenango, 
Bough (Sweet), Summer Queen, Gravenstein,* Jefferis, Porter, Maiden 
Blush. 
Autumn. — Bailey (Sweet), Fameuse,* Jersey Sweet, Fall Pippin, 
Wealthy,* Mother, Twenty Ounce, Magnate. 
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Winter. — Jonathan* (Fig. 271), Hubbardston,* Grimes,* Tomp- 
kins King,* Wagener* (Fig. 272), Baldwin,* Yellow Bellflower, 
Tolman (Sweet), Northern Spy,* Red Canada,* Roxbury, McIntosh,* 
Yellow Newtown (Plate XXT), Golden Russet, Belmont, Melon, Lady, 
Rambo, York Imperial, Pomme Gris, Esopus (Spitzenburgh), Swaar, 
Peck (Pleasant), Rhode Island Greening, Sutton, Delicious, Stayman 
Winesap, Westfield (Seck-no-further). 
* The varieties marked with an asterisk (*) are particularly valuable for 
market purposes as well as for home use; the others are chiefly desirable for 
home use. 
