72 
APPLES. 
native of Massachusetts, and is more largely cultivated for tha 
Boston market than any other sort. It bears most abundantly 
with us, and we have had the satisfaction of raising larger, more 
beautiful, and highly flavoured specimens here, than we ever 
saw in its native region. The Baldwin, in flavour and general 
characteristics, evidently belongs to the same family as our 
Esopus Spitzenburgh, and deserves its extensive popularity. 
Fruit large, roundish, and narrowing a little to the eye. Skin 
yellow in the shade, but nearly covered and striped with crimson, 
red, and orange, in the sun ; dotted with a few large russet dots, 
and with radiating streaks of russet about the stalk. Calyx 
closed, and set in a rather narrow, plaited basin. Stalk half to 
three fourths of an inch long, rather slender for so large a fruit, 
planted in an even, moderately deep cavity. Flesh yellowish 
white, crisp, with that agreeable mingling of the saccharine and 
acid which constitutes a rich, high flavour. The tree is a vigo- 
rous, upright grower, and bears most abundantly. Ripe from 
November to March, but with us is in perfection in January. 
Belle-Fleur, Yellow. Thomp. 
Belie-Fleur. Coxe. Floy. Ken. 
Yellow Bellflower, of most nurseries. 
The Yellow Belle-Fleur is a large, handsome, and excellent 
