Paste baked with something in it or under it, as apple, minced meat, etc.

Pie

Paste baked with something in it or under it, as apple, minced meat, etc.

A plants fruit whose fruit is a round gourd.

Bitter Apple

A plants fruit whose fruit is a round gourd.

A machine to pare apples with.

Apple-parer

A machine to pare apples with.

A fruit tree belonging to the same genus as the apple, and cultivated extensively for its fruit. It is native to Eurasia, where it may be found in many regions still growing wild, either in the form of a shrub or a tree.

Pear

A fruit tree belonging to the same genus as the apple, and cultivated extensively for its fruit. It…

Children working on an apple orchard.

Apple Orchard

Children working on an apple orchard.

A tree of the apple family. It is native to the western part of Asia, but has been naturalized in many regions and is cultivated extensively for its fruit.

Quince

A tree of the apple family. It is native to the western part of Asia, but has been naturalized in many…

A magnified portion of an apple leaf. It shows many small sacks grown together. Each of these sacks is a cell.

Apple Leaf

A magnified portion of an apple leaf. It shows many small sacks grown together. Each of these sacks…

A genus of plants, with angular toothed leaves, large funnel shaped flowers, and a prickly, globular, 4 valved pods.

Thorn Apple

A genus of plants, with angular toothed leaves, large funnel shaped flowers, and a prickly, globular,…

A pear shaped fruit.

Fruit of Quince

A pear shaped fruit.

"A wormy apple, showing the familiar mass of brown particles thrown out at the blossom-end by the young worm." — Goff, 1904

Wormy Apple

"A wormy apple, showing the familiar mass of brown particles thrown out at the blossom-end by the young…

"Section of wormy apple; a, codling moth; b, cocoon." — Goff, 1904

Wormy Apple

"Section of wormy apple; a, codling moth; b, cocoon." — Goff, 1904

The blossom of the well-known apple tree.

Apple-blossom

The blossom of the well-known apple tree.

"The name commonly given in the West Indies and other tropical countries to the fruits of certain species of Anona, a genus of trees of the natural order Anonaceae. Some of the fruits of this genus are among the most delicious produced in tropical countries, as the Charimoyer, and even the common custard apple, which is regarded as a native of America, but is now very superior even to the West Indian." — Chambers' Encyclopedia, 1875

Custard Apple

"The name commonly given in the West Indies and other tropical countries to the fruits of certain species…

The larva of a <em>Coleophora malivorella</em>

Apple Case-Bearer

The larva of a Coleophora malivorella

The pupa of a <em>Coleophora malivorella</em>

Apple Case-Bearer

The pupa of a Coleophora malivorella

<em>Coleophora malivorella</em> or Apple case-bearer adult moth

Apple Case-Bearer

Coleophora malivorella or Apple case-bearer adult moth

Trypeta pomonella. The parent of the apple-maggot.

Apple Maggot

Trypeta pomonella. The parent of the apple-maggot.

Shoot with its leaves 5-ranked, the sixth leaf over the first; as in the Apple-tree.

Apple-tree

Shoot with its leaves 5-ranked, the sixth leaf over the first; as in the Apple-tree.

Eriosoma Lanigera, or the Wooly Apple-Tree Blight. These insects appropriate for their generic name two Greek words, signifying wool and body, the insect being partially enveloped in a cottony or wool-like secretion, furnished from its own body. The eggs are deposited in crotches or cracks of the branches or bark, often at or near the surface of the ground, or on new shoots springing from the parent tree.

Wooly Aphid

Eriosoma Lanigera, or the Wooly Apple-Tree Blight. These insects appropriate for their generic name…

The females deposit their eggs, which are small, oval, and black, on twigs and bark in the autumn; the insect is hatched out the next spring, and feeds upon the sap of the tree. The first broods are all females, which in a short time, without any intercourse with the males, give birth to living young by the process of gemmation. These also produce other young ones, which are all females as long as the summer lasts, and it is only in the autumn that males are produced, which, uniting with the females, become the parents of the eggs for the following spring brood, thus bearing living young all the summer, and laying eggs which can withstand the frosts of the winter in autumn for the following spring season, while the parent insects in winter are destroyed by the wet and cold weather and alternate freezing and thawing.

Apple Plant Louse

The females deposit their eggs, which are small, oval, and black, on twigs and bark in the autumn; the…

The females deposit their eggs, which are small, oval, and black, on twigs and bark in the autumn; the insect is hatched out the next spring, and feeds upon the sap of the tree. The first broods are all females, which in a short time, without any intercourse with the males, give birth to living young by the process of gemmation. These also produce other young ones, which are all females as long as the summer lasts, and it is only in the autumn that males are produced, which, uniting with the females, become the parents of the eggs for the following spring brood, thus bearing living young all the summer, and laying eggs which can withstand the frosts of the winter in autumn for the following spring season, while the parent insects in winter are destroyed by the wet and cold weather and alternate freezing and thawing.

Apple Plant Louse

The females deposit their eggs, which are small, oval, and black, on twigs and bark in the autumn; the…

Woolly apple-louse, Schizoneura lanigera: showing a group of specimens on bark.

Apple Louse

Woolly apple-louse, Schizoneura lanigera: showing a group of specimens on bark.

Woolly apple-louse, Schizoneura lanigera: a crevice on a branch where they congregate.

Apple Louse

Woolly apple-louse, Schizoneura lanigera: a crevice on a branch where they congregate.

Woolly apple-louse, Schizoneura lanigera: a winged adult.

Apple Louse

Woolly apple-louse, Schizoneura lanigera: a winged adult.

Schizoneura Langera in root form, galls caused by them on apple-roots.

Schizoneura Langera

Schizoneura Langera in root form, galls caused by them on apple-roots.

The flat-head apple-borer Chrysobothris femorata species; larva.

Apple Borer

The flat-head apple-borer Chrysobothris femorata species; larva.

The flat-head apple-borer Chrysobothris femorata species; pupa.

Apple Borer

The flat-head apple-borer Chrysobothris femorata species; pupa.

The flat-head apple-borer Chrysobothris femorata species.

Apple Borer

The flat-head apple-borer Chrysobothris femorata species.

The flat-head apple-borer Chrysobothris femorata species; adult.

Apple Borer

The flat-head apple-borer Chrysobothris femorata species; adult.

Apple-twig borer, Amphicerus bicaudatus species; beetle, from above.

Apple Twig Borer

Apple-twig borer, Amphicerus bicaudatus species; beetle, from above.

Apple-twig borer, Amphicerus bicaudatus species; beetle, from above.

Apple Twig Borer

Apple-twig borer, Amphicerus bicaudatus species; beetle, from above.

Apple-twig borer, Amphicerus bicaudatus species; larva.

Apple Twig Borer

Apple-twig borer, Amphicerus bicaudatus species; larva.

Apple-twig borer, Amphicerus bicaudatus species; structural detail.

Apple Twig Borer

Apple-twig borer, Amphicerus bicaudatus species; structural detail.

Apple-twig borer, Amphicerus bicaudatus species; structural detail.

Apple Twig Borer

Apple-twig borer, Amphicerus bicaudatus species; structural detail.

Apple-twig borer, Amphicerus bicaudatus species; pupa.

Apple Twig Borer

Apple-twig borer, Amphicerus bicaudatus species; pupa.

Apple-twig borer, Amphicerus bicaudatus species; pupa in larval burrow.

Apple Twig Borer

Apple-twig borer, Amphicerus bicaudatus species; pupa in larval burrow.

Round-headed apple-borer, Saperda candida species; larva.

Apple Borer

Round-headed apple-borer, Saperda candida species; larva.

Round-headed apple-borer, Saperda candida species; pupa.

Apple Borer

Round-headed apple-borer, Saperda candida species; pupa.

Round-headed apple-borer, Saperda candida species; adult.

Apple Borer

Round-headed apple-borer, Saperda candida species; adult.

Teras minuta species; case made on apple-leaf.

Moth

Teras minuta species; case made on apple-leaf.

The codling moth, Carpocapsa pomonella species; a, apple cut to show borings of the larva; b, place where the egg was laid and the larva started; e, larva; f, moth at rest.

Codling Moth

The codling moth, Carpocapsa pomonella species; a, apple cut to show borings of the larva; b, place…

The hyoid, os hyoides, or tongue bone, is an isolated, U-shaped bone lying in front of the throat, just above the Adam's apple; it supports the tongue, and give attachment to some of its numerous muscles.

Human Hyoid Bone

The hyoid, os hyoides, or tongue bone, is an isolated, U-shaped bone lying in front of the throat, just…

Diagram showing the structure of the lungs. At <em>d</em> is the left lung, and at <em>c</em> are represented the main branch of the windpipe that go to the right lung, separated by the lung itself. At the lower part, at <em>e</em>, are represented the very minute branches as they go to the air-cells (alveoli). At <em>b</em> is the windpipe (trachea), and at <em>a</em> is the larynx (or Adam's apple). It is through a chink in this that air passes in and out as we breathe.

Structure of the Lungs

Diagram showing the structure of the lungs. At d is the left lung, and at c are represented…

Leaves - simple; alternate; edge distinctly toothed when mature; sometimes near three-lobed Outline - egg-shape or oval Apex - pointed. Base - rounded or somewhat heart-shaped Leaf/Stem - one half to one inch long, very slender, downy Leaf - about two to three inches long, two thirds as wide, smooth. Flowers - large; rose-colored and white, in loose clusters of five to ten blossoms, and very fragrant. May. Fruit - round, one to one and a half inches in diameter; yellowish, fragrant, hard, and sour; fit only for preserving. Found - from Ontario to Western New York, Pennsylvania, and the District of Columbia; long the Alleghany Mountains, and westward. General Information - A small tree, ten to twenty feet high, rarely thirty feet, gaining its finest growth in the valleys of the lower Ohio. Often its presence is recognized before it is seen by means of the delightful fragrance of its blossoms.

Genus Pyrus L. (Apple, Mt. Ash)

Leaves - simple; alternate; edge distinctly toothed when mature; sometimes near three-lobed Outline…

A boy and a girl hold hands as they take a walk near an apple tree.

Children

A boy and a girl hold hands as they take a walk near an apple tree.

An apple is hanging from a tree.

Apple Tree

An apple is hanging from a tree.

Mother Nature is in an apple orchard. It is autumn.

Mother Nature, Fall

Mother Nature is in an apple orchard. It is autumn.

A decorative border of vines and apples.

Apple Border

A decorative border of vines and apples.

A decorative banner of vines and apples.

Apple Banner

A decorative banner of vines and apples.

A section of the apple blossom.

Apple Blossom

A section of the apple blossom.

"Baldwin apple cross pollinated with pollen of the Bellflower apple." -Department of Agriculture, 1899

Baldwin/Bellflower Apple

"Baldwin apple cross pollinated with pollen of the Bellflower apple." -Department of Agriculture, 1899

"Large specimen of self-pollinated Baldwin apple." -Department of Agriculture, 1899

Baldwin Apple

"Large specimen of self-pollinated Baldwin apple." -Department of Agriculture, 1899

"Small specimen of self-pollinated Baldwin apple." -Department of Agriculture, 1899

Baldwin Apple

"Small specimen of self-pollinated Baldwin apple." -Department of Agriculture, 1899

"B, cross section through skin of apple." -Stevens, 1916

Apple Epidermis

"B, cross section through skin of apple." -Stevens, 1916

A decorative doodad or divider of a tree.

Tree Doodad

A decorative doodad or divider of a tree.

Of the barberry family (Berberidaceae), the may apple or Podophyllum peltatum.

May Apple

Of the barberry family (Berberidaceae), the may apple or Podophyllum peltatum.

"Pome.--A pulpy fruit, containing a capsule, as the apple and pear." -Newman, 1850

Pome

"Pome.--A pulpy fruit, containing a capsule, as the apple and pear." -Newman, 1850

Of the Nightshade family (Solanaceae), the purple thorn apple (Datura Tatula).

Purple Thorn Apple

Of the Nightshade family (Solanaceae), the purple thorn apple (Datura Tatula).

"Leaf of apple, with stipules." -Bergen, 1896

Apple Leaf

"Leaf of apple, with stipules." -Bergen, 1896

"Stigma of thorn-apple (Datura) with pollen." -Bergen, 1896

Stigma

"Stigma of thorn-apple (Datura) with pollen." -Bergen, 1896