
WINTER VARIETIES—Continued 
GALLIA BEAUTY. Solid red, high quality. December-May. 
JONATHAN. Red. Fine commercial variety. November-March. 
KENDALL. New. Dark red. Fruit large. October to January. 
LOBO. Larger and darker red than its parent, McIntosh. Octo- 
ber-November. 
MACOUN. Dark red, white fleshed; rich flavor.- October-March. 
MILTON. MclIntosh-like but ripens a month before. Fruits pink- 
ish red with heavy bloom. Flesh tender, juicy. Sept.-Oct. 
McINTOSH RED. Hardy, good size, nearly covered with red. 
Flesh white, tender, annual bearer. Yields large crops. Octo- 
ber-January. 
NEW ROGERS McINTOSH. Solid red McIntosh, classed as one 
of the most valuable new fruit introductions in years. An- 
nual bearer. Fruit is the same size as the common McIntosh, 
but is not striped. Flesh white, fine grained, very tender, 
juicy. Better quality than common McIntosh and hangs better 
on tree. October-January. 
NORTHERN SPY. Hardy, striped. Flesh juicy and tender. De- 
2 
cember-March, |#a 
RED ROME. Rapidly becoming a leading commercial variety 
having the same shape and texture with equal or better 
quality than Rome Beauty. December-March. 
RED NORTHERN SPY. Red Spy is typical Northern Spy apple 
except in color. The Red Spy colors a solid bright red with- 
out either stripes or splashes. Very popular winter variety. 
December-March. 
R. I. GREENING. Fruit large and handsome, smooth, dark green 
overspread with yellow. More highly prized for cooking than 
any other apple. Excellent keeper, tree very heavy yielder. 
December-May. 
SWEET DELICIOUS. Large and attractive in size, color and 
shape with the sweet aromatic flavor of Delicious. The variety 
is an apple for home use, dessert and baking. Sweet Deli- 
cious is now voted as our best winter sweet. December-April. 
WEALTHY. Red, flesh white, sub-acid. October-January. 
YELLOW DELICIOUS. A bright golden yellow apple. Many say 
this is the finest yellow apple. Bears young and heavily. The 
fruit is large, juicy and exceptionally fine quality. Oct.-April. 
HYSLOP CRAB. Fruit large, deep crimson. Desirable for home 
use and market. Late September. 
Locust Lane, State College, Pa., 
May 10, 1942. 
Gentlemen: 
The block of McIntosh we got of you some 23 years ago 
will have another big crop. In 1940 they packed out 900 
busheis per acre; in 1941, 600 bushels to the acre. This year, 
if they set as per bloom, they’ll go 900 bushels per acre 
again. The Stayman, Rome and Baldwin are well up in 
yield but not equal to McIntosh. 
Very truly yours, 
MR. F. N. FAGAN. 
Red 
Gravenstein 
CHOIGE APPLE “TREES 
YOUNG BLARING -~-ht4LL ROOTLD ~ VIGOROUS 

















































Rogers 
McIntosh 
Red 
Ege 
Yellow 
Delicious 
Double 
Red 
Delicious 

