10 



BULLETIN 485, "C. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. 



TTith the exception of relatively small areas located in the South 

 Atlantic and Gulf coast regions where it is too warm, in the upper 



Fig. 6. — Outline map of the United States, showing the distribution by States of the 

 Winesap apple, each dot representing 100.000 bushels, the total being the estimated 

 average crop for 1909 to 1913. inclusive. The arrangement of the dots within the 

 State boundaries has no significance. 



Mississippi Valley where it is too cold, and in some sections of the 



Fig. 7. — Outline map of the United States, showing the distribution by States of the 

 Rhode Island Greening apple, each dot representing 100,000 bushels, the total being 

 the estimated average crop for 1909 to 1913, inclusive. The arrangement of the dots 

 within the State boundaries has no significance. 



semiarid regions and in the intermountaia States where it is either 

 too cold or too dry. or both, there is hardly a community where 



