APPLES 425 
Sieulle, Easter, Gansels Bergamotte, 
Gray Doyenne, Howell, Jones, Lawrence, 
Louise Bonne, Mount Vernon, Pound, 
Sheldon, Souvenir du Congress, Superfin, 
Colonel Wilder, Winter Nelis. 
Varieties generally  self-fertile —An- 
gouleme, Bosc, Brockworth, Buffman, 
Diel, Doyenne d’Alencon, Flemish Beauty, 
Heathcote, Kieffer, Le Conte, Manning 
Elizabeth, Seckel, Tyson, White Doyenne 
Apples (Waite and Fairchild) 
Varieties more or tess self-sterile — 
Bellflower, Chenango (Strawberry), Grav- 
enstein, King, Northern Spy, Norton, 
Melon, Primate, Rambo, Red Astrachan, 
Roxbury Russet, Spitzenburg, Tolman 
Sweet. 
Varieties mostly self-feriile.—Baldwin, 
Codling, Greening. 
“The varieties of apples are more in- 
clined to be sterile to their own pollen 
than the pears. With the former, in the 
great majority of cases, no fruit resulted 
from self-pollination. The results, as a 
rule, however, were less clear-cut than 
in the pear, because, with most of the 
self-sterile varieties, an occasional fruit 
will set under self-pollination, and none 
of the varieties were very completely 
self-fertile ’—Waite 
Other Fruits 
The quince seems to fruit nearly as 
well with its own pollen as with that of 
another variety ’’—Waiute. 
Many of the native plums are notori- 
ously self-sterile, particularly Wild Goose. 
Other self-sterile varieties are Miner, 
Wazata, Minnetonka, Itaska. Varieties 
more or less self-fertile are Moreman, 
Newman, Wayland, Golden Beauty, Mari- 
anna, Deep Creek, Purple Yosemite. 
Strawberries often lack stamens alto- 
gether, whilst others, like Crescent, have 
so few and so poor stamens that they 
are practically self-sterile. Ordinarily, 
there should be a row of a perfect- 
flowered variety for eve1y two rows of 
a pistillate or infertile variety. 
Grapes (Beach) 
Unfruitful when planted by themselves. 
—Black Eagle, Brighton, Eumelan, Mas- 
sassoit, Wilder, Rogers’ No. 5, Gaertner, 
Merrimac, Requa, Aminia, Hssex, Barry, 
Herbert, Salem. 
Able to set fruit of themselves.—Con- 
cord, Diamond, Niagara, Winchell or 
Green Mountain, Rogers’ Nos. 13, 24, and 
32, Agwam, Delaware. 
(Bailey’s Rule Book, pages 121, 122) 
