22 



PEACHES NECTARINES. 



The following have been obtained from different sections of the Union by the names 

 attached to them, but the most of them are probably synonyms of sorts already enu- 

 merated. 



Price 25 to 30 cents each— $16 to $20 per hundred. 



American purple 



Astor 



Bergen's fine yellow 



Brainard's yellow 



Braddick's American 



Brodie's 



Carolina incomparable 



Cole's white melocoton 



Cooper's early 



Dunlop's lemon 



Elizabethtown 



Fox's seedling 



Gallatin 



Grand Admirable C 



Hand's Claret 



Hill's Madeira 



Hoyte's lemon C 



Lafayette red C 



Large yellow preserving 



Lemon freestone 



Mammoth 



Sept Mercator 



! Milford white, for preserves A 

 | Meig's Lafayette 



Monstrous Lemon C 



Necton 



New mala gat une 



Probyn's C 



Red fleshed American 



Red pine apple C 



Scarlet pine apple C 



Snow peach A 



Stanhope's Roman 



Stocker's seedling 



Storm's early seedling 



Superb white 



Superlative 



Williamson's New-York C 



Ward's late freestone 



Weld's freestone 



Yellow nutmeg, very small and inferior 



do 



Aug 



do 

 Sept 



do 



Oct 

 Aug 



Sept 



Sept 



Sept 



Sept 



N. B. Trees of the different kinds can be supplied suitable for dwarfs or espaliers. 



NECTARINES. Brugnons. Amygdalus ncctarina. 



37^ cents each — $30 per hundred. 



N. B. This fruit will succeed and produce well in any place where the peach does, if 

 the directions are followed which are stated in the Treatise recently published ; and 

 as the varieties of this fruit are characterized by their beautiful transparent and 

 waxen appearance, they may be ranked among the most admired appendages of 

 the desert. 



C denotes clingstones, 



p;n 



