The peaches of New York . GOLD DROP. GOVERNOR HOGG THE PEACHES OF NEW YORK 221 pubescence thick, coarse; skin adhering to the pulp; flesh pale yellow to the pit, variablein juiciness, pleasantly sprightly; good in quality; stone free, one and nine-sixteenthsinches long, one and one-sixteenth inches wide, broadly ovate, bulged at one side, witha pointed apex and deeply grooved surfaces; ventral suture deeply grooved at the sides,rather narrow; dorsal suture with a deep groove, wing4ike. GOVERNOR HOGG I. Brown Bros. Cat. 27. 1906. 2. Ga. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 65, 66. 1907. 3. Am. Pom. Soc. Cat.


The peaches of New York . GOLD DROP. GOVERNOR HOGG THE PEACHES OF NEW YORK 221 pubescence thick, coarse; skin adhering to the pulp; flesh pale yellow to the pit, variablein juiciness, pleasantly sprightly; good in quality; stone free, one and nine-sixteenthsinches long, one and one-sixteenth inches wide, broadly ovate, bulged at one side, witha pointed apex and deeply grooved surfaces; ventral suture deeply grooved at the sides,rather narrow; dorsal suture with a deep groove, wing4ike. GOVERNOR HOGG I. Brown Bros. Cat. 27. 1906. 2. Ga. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 65, 66. 1907. 3. Am. Pom. Soc. Cat. 4. N. J. Hort. Soc. Rpt. 37. 1912. 5. Waugh Am. Peach Orch. 202. 6. Del. Sta. Rpt. 13:101. 1901. Were it not that Governor Hogg must compete with the well-estab-lished Greensboro and Carman, we should say at once that it was wellworth trying in commercial planting in New York as an early, white-fleshed peach. In the Station orchard, Governor Hogg ripens a few daysafter Carman, is larger, handsomer and as good in qu


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