57° THE PLUMS OF NEW YORK. 



Yellow Magmim Bonum. Domestica. i. Jour. Hort. N. S. 17:228. 1869. 



According to the preceding reference this variety is distinct from the Yellow Egg 

 (White Magnum Bonum). Fruit medium in size, oval, dull yellow sprinkled with red 

 dots; rich; clingstone; young shoots smooth. 



Yellow Nagate. Triflora. i. Am. Pom. Soc. Rpt. io5. 1891. 2. Can. Exp. Farm 

 Bui. 2nd Ser. 3:57. 1900. 



A little known Triflora very closely resembling if not identical with some of the 

 standard yellow Trifloras. 



Yellow Oregon. Hortulana. i. Wis. Sia. Bui. 63:66. 1897. 2. Vt. Sta. An.. Rpt. 

 11:287. 1898. 



Described by Waugh from specimens received by him from B. A. Matthews, Iowa. 

 Fruit small, nearly spherical; suture a faint line; bright golden-yellow; dots many, 

 whitish; skin thick and strong; flesh yellow and not very firm; quality medium; stone 

 large, smooth, clinging; inferior in size and quality to Captain or Cumberland. 

 Yellow Panhandle. Angustifolia watsoni. i. Wis. Sta. Bui. 63:66. 1897. 2. Bailey 

 Ev. Nat. Fruits 222, 223. 1898. 3, Waugh Plum Cult. 234. 1901. 4. Ga. 

 Sta. Bui. 67:285. 1904. 



A variety from the Panhandle of Texas; introduced by F. T. Ramsey of Austin, 

 Texas. Tree forms a close symmetrical head; fruit small, roundish-oblong, yellow 

 overspread with clear bright red; dots few, indistinct; skin tough; flesh yellow, hard; 

 quality poor; stone medium, oval, turgid, clinging. 



Yellow Roman Bullace. Insititia. Mentioned in Lond. Hort. Soc. Cat. 144. 1831. 

 Yellow Sweet. Americana, i. Cornell Sta. Bui. 38:46. 1892. 2. Colo. Sta. Bui. 50: 

 47. 1898. 3. Waugh Plum Cult. 168. 1901. 



Thought to have originated in Minnesota. Tree small; fruit large, round inclining 

 to oblong; suture distinct; stem short and stout; yellow more or less mottled and 

 shaded with red; bloom thin; flesh firm, juicy, rich, sweet; good; stone round, flat, 

 clinging. 



Yellow Transparent. Angustifolia varians. i. Am. Pom. Soc. Rpt. 162. 1881. 

 2. Am. Pom. Soc. Cat. 25. 1897. 3. Ohio Sta. Bui. 113:156. 1899. 4. Waugh 

 Plum Cult. 200. 1901. 



Transparent 4 incor. Transparent Yellow 2. 



Selected from a seedling orchard of two thousand trees planted near Denison, 

 Texas, by J. L. Freeman. Tree vigorous, forming a handsome top, productive; fruit 

 medium in size, oblong, bright yellow; skin thin and tough, reported to crack badly 

 in some localities; flesh soft and watery, sweet and good; clingstone; early. 

 Yellow Wildgoose. Munsoniana? i. Van Lindley Cat. 42. 1899. 



Said to have been introduced by R. Bates of Jackson, South Carolina. Fruit 

 large, equal in size to Wild Goose with better quality; ripens at the same time. 

 Yellow Yosemite. Species? i. Card. Man. 20:176. 1878. 2. Mich. Sta. Bui. 118:52, 

 55. 1895. Yosemite i. Yosemite Yellow 2. 



Yellow Yosemite came from the " Rocky Mountains " about 1870 with the Purple 

 Yosemite; introduced by W. S. Carpenter, Rye, New York. Fruit roundish; suture 



