
New York AgricuttruraL Experiment Station. 619 
*Allen’s No. 3,8. (From W. F. Allen, Jr., Salisbury, Ma) 
Unproductive. 
Allen's No. 5, Pe (From W. F. Allen, Jr., Salisbury, Md.) 
Blossoms with Sharpless. Foliage very good ; runners abundant. 
Fruit medium to large, dark crimson, borne on good stems, fair 
quality, moderately firm, productive. Of more than forty varie- 
ties fruited for the first time this season, Allen’s No. 5 was most 
productive. 
Allen's No. 6, P. (From W. F. Allen, Jr., Salisbury, Md.) 
Blossoms with Sharpless. Fruit medium or above in size, good 
quality, moderately firm, dark scarlet color, borne on good stems. 
Foliage good; runners abundant. Among the varieties fruited 
here for the first time in 1494 it ranks tenth in productiveness. 
Allen’s No. 138, P. (From W. Ff. Allen, Jr., Salisbury, Md.) 
Begins to blossom a few days earlier than Sharpless. [oliage 
rather small and moderately abundant; runners abundant. Fruit 
medium size, borne on good stems, dark scarlet color, moderately 
firm, fair quality. Among the varieties fruited here for the first 
time in 1894 it ranks fifth in productiveness. 
Allen’s No. 14, P. (From W. F. Allen, Jr., Salisbury, Md.) 
Begins to blossom a few days earlier than Sharpless. Foliage 
very good; runners very abundant. Fruit medium size, good 
hght searlet color, firm, good quality. The fruit has a neck 
which is considered an objectionable feature by some growers. 
Among the varieties fruited here for the first time this season it 
ranks fourteenth yet on account of its vigor, and the firmness, 
good color and good quality of its fruit, it should be tested 
further before being discarded. 
*Arkansaw Traveler, P. (from 7. G. Michel, /Judsonia, 
Arkansas.) Fruit scarlet color. Unproductive here. 
*Aroma, 8. (/rom E. W. Cruse, Leavenworth. Kans.) Fruit 
- medium to large, borne on good stems, scarlet, firm, poor quality. 
Foliage first class. Runners very abundant. Not productive 
this season. 
Beauty, P. (From J. H. Haines, Delphi, Ind.) A beautiful 
berry of bright scarlet color. It yields a considerable portion of 
its crop early in the season. Though it does not take first rank 

*Varieties marked with a * were fruited in beds two years old. More complete descriptions 
of them may be found in Bulletin 64 of this Station or the Annual Report for 1893. 
