New York AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION. 389 



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|+ | » | Long Island. 
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ea cee | Erie Shore. 


* | Hudson Valley. 

St. Lawrence and 
Champlain V’l’ys. 
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4 | Mohawk Valley. 
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* | Eastern Plateau. 
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% | Central Lakes. 
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Hi | Ontario Shore. 
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| % | Western Plateau. 


REMARKS. 
Hardy, vigorous, productive, cosmopolitan. Largely 
planted. 
Unworthy of consideration by New York fruit growers. 
As yet not sufficiently tested in New York. 
A western type of Baldwin. Worthy of testing. 
Similar to Northern Spy; hardier. Inferior in color and 
quality. Worthy of trial in Northern New York. 
Not well tested in New York. Worthy of further test. 
Surpassed by other dessert apples of its season. 
Yellow Bellflower group. Of good quality, but skin tender 
and susceptible to scab. 
Of no value. 
Not well tested in New York. 
Supposed to be a seedling of Tompkins King. Worth 
testing. 
A southern variety not well tested in New York. 
| Probably obsolete. 
Not tested sufficiently to determine its value. 
Resembles Early Harvest. Later. Worthy of trial. 
Not tested sufficiently to determine its value. 
Seedling of Oldenburg. Worth trying in the North. 
Not recommended for planting in this State. 
Probably not well suited to this State. 
cack eee ged for general planting. May be valuable 
ocally. 
Cannot displace Oldenburg which is the same in season. 
Long known but has failed to establish itself. 
A Queens County seedling; apparently obsolete. 
Worthy of attention for home use and local market. 
Scarcely tested; of doubtful value. 
Shy bearer, subject to diseases. Fruit beautiful and excel- 
lent in quality. 
Not regarded with favor as a commercial variety. Subject 
to ‘‘Baldwin spot.”’ 
Has net acquired a valuable reputation. 
Excelled by other russets of its season. 
Resembles Wealthy and does not surpass it. 
Desirable only when hardiness is a prime requisite. 
Not sufficiently tested in New York to determine its value. 
Not recommended for planting in New York. 
Not adapted to New York conditions. Southern. 
Should give place to better sorts. 
A small russet of high quality. Not profitable commercially. 
An English sort, of little value in America. 
Has many merits for home use and local market. 
An old variety now practically obsolete. 
Surpassed by standard varieties of its season. 
| Tree characters poor. Valuable for dessert and local market. 
Requires furher testing. 
Worthy of trial in Northern New York. 
Not well adapted to this region. Southern. 
Should give place to others of better qualities. 
Valued for home and market purposes. 
Supplanted by better sorts. 
Obsolete. 
Seldom reaches marketable size in New York. Blossoms 
very late. A 
Tender tree; productive to a fault; excellent quality. 
Without commercial value in New York. 
Worthless except as a substitute for Red June where that 
sort winter kills. 
