552 THE PLUMS OF NEW YORK. 



Tectunseh. Americana, i. Kerr Cat. 13. 1897. 2. Can. Exp. Farm Bui. 2nd Ser. 

 3:52. 1900. Hughes Late i. 



J. W. Pool of Indiana who introduced this plum named it Hughes Late but later 

 changed the name to avoid confusion with the variety named Hughes. Fruit medium 

 in size, round, yellow mottled with bright red changing to coppery-red when ftdly ripe; 

 clingstone ; mid-season. 

 Temple. Species? i. Am. Pom. Soc. Cat. 1875-1899. 



Listed by the American Pomological Society in its catalog from 1875 to 1899. 

 Tenneha. Species? Mentioned in Cornell Sta. Bui. 38:80. 1892. 

 Tennessee. Munsoniana. i. Am. Jour. Hort. 5:148. 1869. Tennessee Plum i. 



A strain of Wild Goose. 

 Terrell. Triflora X ? i. Am.Pom.Soc.Rpt.2/^g. 1903. 2. Glen. St. Mary Nur. Cat. 1904. 



A seedling of Excelsior from Jay Terrell, Hastings, Florida; introduced by the 

 Glen St. Mary Nurseries, Glen St. Mary, Florida. Tree healthy, vigorous, similar to 

 Excelsior, bears heavy crops annually; fruit medium to large, nearly round; suture 

 a line; apex blunt; cavity medium in depth; stem short and slender; reddish-yellow, 

 somewhat mottled and deepening to wine-red; dots minute, yellowish; skin thin, 

 tough; flesh greenish-yellow, meaty, subacid, rich; excellent; stone small, broadly 

 oval, turgid, clinging; ripens in June in the South. 



Terry. Americana mollis, i. Stark Bros. Cat. 1896. 2. la. Sta. Bui. 46:271. 1900. 

 3. la. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 224. 1902. 4. 5. Dak. Sta. Bui. 93:40. 1905. 



Free Silver 2. Free Silver i, 3, 4. 



H. A. Terry of Crescent, Iowa grew this variety from seed of Van Buren; first fruited 

 about 1896. Tree vigorous, upright, open; fruit large, regular, oval; cavity small, 

 shallow; suture indistinct; dark red; dots small, gray; bloom thin; flesh yellow, 

 firm but melting; good; stone large, oval, clinging; mid-season; ripens very evenly. 

 Terry De Soto. Americana, i. Terry Cat. 1900. 2. la. Sta. Bui. 46:289. 1900. 



Terry's Desota i. 



A seedling of De Soto, grown by H. A. Terry. Tree vigorous, upright, productive; 

 fruit large, golden-yellow overspread with Ught crimson, mottled with darker shades; 

 flesh yellow, rich and sweet; clingstone; early. 



Texas Belle. Munsoniana. i. Ga. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 34, 57. 1888. 2. Cornell Sta. Bui. 

 38:50. 1892. 3. Tex. Sta. Bui. 32:481. 1894. 



Belle 2. Paris Belle i, 3. 



Grown by Stephen H. Turner of Texas; introduced by Dr. W. W. Steele of Paris, 

 Texas. Tree small, drooping, hardy and productive; fruit medium to large, round- 

 ish, light red; flesh yellow, firm, sweet and pleasant; stone short and turgid, clinging; 

 last of June in Texas. Mentioned in the catalog of the American Pomological Society 

 in 1897. 

 Texas Gage. Domestica. i. Tex. Sta. Bui. 32:484. 1894. 



Noted in the preceding reference as having been grown at the Texas Experiment 

 Station. 



