76 NASTURTIUM, OR STURTION. 



MUSTARD. 

 MOUTARDE. Sinapis. 



VARIETIES. 

 White. I Black. 



THE Jllba, or White Mustard, grows spontaneously in the 

 fields of England ; it is also cultivated as a small salad, as well 

 as for seed. The seed yields from every hundred pounds, 

 from thirty-three to thirty-six pounds of sweet mild oil. 



White Mustard Seed is much used as a medicine, and per- 

 sons subject to disordered stomachs often derive great benefit 

 by taking a spoonful of the dry seed, two or three times a day 

 Some use it in pickles, to which it imparts an agreeable fla- 

 vour, and renders Cucumbers in particular more salutary. 



The JWgrfl or Common Mustard, is also a native of England. 



The condiment called Mustard, and in daily use at our table 

 is prepared from the seed of this species. 



The seed, of each variety, may be sown in clean rich 

 ground in April and May; and for a fall salad in September 

 in shallow drills. 



NASTURTIUM, OR STURTION. 

 CAPUCINE. Tropwolnm. 



THIS is an annual plant, a native of Peru, and is highly 

 deserving of cultivation for the sake of its brilliant orange 

 and crimson coloured flower, as well as for the berries, 

 which, if gathered while green and pickled in vinegar, make 

 a good substrate for capers, and are used in melted butter, 

 with boiled mutton, &c. 



The seed should be sown in April, or early in May, in 

 drills about an inch deep, near fences or pales ; or trellises 

 should be constructed, on which they can climb and have 

 support, for they will always be more productive in this way 

 than when suffered to trail on the ground. 



