The peaches of New York . n-sixteenths inch wide, flattened wedge-like at the base,oval to obovate, winged, usually without btdge, long-pointed at the apex, with pittedsurfaces; ventral suture deeply furrowed, wide; dorsal suture deeply grooved. CHINESE CLmO I. Downing Fr. Trees Am. 636. 1857. 2. Horticulturist 14:107. 1859. 3. Am. Pom. Soc. 1871. 4. Del. Sta. Rpt. 13:85, 86, 95, 107, fig. 4. 1901. Shanghae. 5, Mag. Hort. 17:464. 1851. 6. Card. Chron. 693. 1852. 7. Downing Fr. Trees 1857. Chinese Peach. 8. Horticulturist N. S. 3:286, 472. 1853. Shanghai, g. Jiogg Fruit Man. 2^1


The peaches of New York . n-sixteenths inch wide, flattened wedge-like at the base,oval to obovate, winged, usually without btdge, long-pointed at the apex, with pittedsurfaces; ventral suture deeply furrowed, wide; dorsal suture deeply grooved. CHINESE CLmO I. Downing Fr. Trees Am. 636. 1857. 2. Horticulturist 14:107. 1859. 3. Am. Pom. Soc. 1871. 4. Del. Sta. Rpt. 13:85, 86, 95, 107, fig. 4. 1901. Shanghae. 5, Mag. Hort. 17:464. 1851. 6. Card. Chron. 693. 1852. 7. Downing Fr. Trees 1857. Chinese Peach. 8. Horticulturist N. S. 3:286, 472. 1853. Shanghai, g. Jiogg Fruit Man. 2^1. 1866. De Chang-Hai. 10. Masie Verger 7:211, 212, fig. 104. 1866-73. Chinese Cling holds a high place in the esteem of American pomol-ogists for its intrinsic value, because it was the first peach in one of themain stems of the peach-family to come to America, and because it is theparent, or one of the parents, of a great number of the best white-fleshedpeaches grown in this country. The variety is not now remarkable for. CHILI


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