NECTARINES ALMONDS. 23 



The following are very celebrated varieties, recently introduced from Italy, France, 

 and England, 81 each. 



Aiton's seedling C Aug 



29 Amateur's early violet do 



30 Cherry, or Cerise P do 



31 Despres P do 



32 Dovvnton do 



33 Early white do 



37 Late yellow, Jamie lisse P Oct 



38 Large early violet P Sept 



Grosse Violette — Grosse violette 

 native 



39 Montpellier Aug 



40 Orange, or Golden C Sept 



34 French white P do ! 41 New black C Aug 



35 Genoa (Late Genoa) \ 42 Syon do. 



36 Laugier (French) 43 White Brussels 



N. B. Trees of all kinds can be supplied, if desired, suitable for dwarfs or espaliers 



AL MONDS. Amandiers. 



Those marked thus * are 37| cents each, or §30 per hundred. 

 Those not marked are 50 cents, or 840 per hundred. 



Nos. 2, 3,4, 5, 12, 13, 14, and 16, are the line kinds cultivated for the table. Nos. 

 7, 8, 9, and 10, are ornamental and 8 and 9 are particularly beautiful. 



1 *Common bitter hardshell, P Amygdalus amara 



2 Great Fruited, sweet, and our. nf the most hard if P macrocarpa 



Soft shell 



3 Sweet hardshell, one of the most hardy P communis 

 Jordan, — Coque dure 



4 ^Ladies' thin shell, (Thin shell) too tender for a 

 ■northern climate, P 



Amande des dames alba 



5 White flowering, sweet 



6 Large bitter hardshell, Grosse cassunte, P maxima 



7 *Dwarf single flowering, P nana 



8 *Dwarf double dowering, P, very ornamental pumila pi. vcl sinensis 



9 Large double flowering, P, very ornamental communis pi. 



10 Caucasian woolly incana 



Fine new French and Italian Almonds — 81 each, except those noted. 



11 Aberame demi-amere I 14 Farisienne, sweet 



3 2 Amande a flotto, or a flots, sweet | 15 New bitter fruited, 50 cts 



13 Balotte, sweet j 16 Small round hardshell, sweet 75 els 



X. B. French sweet hardshell almonds, 825 per hundred. 



MULBERRIES. Meiers. 



In consequence of the attention of our government, and of individuals, to the rearing 

 of silk, and tiie culture of the Mulberry, great pains have been taken to introduce 

 from France, Italy, and elsewhere, the kinds which have acquired most celebrity 

 for this purpose ; and of the success of those exertions, the following list will_bear 

 ample testimony. 



S denotes those most used for silk worms. Those marked * arc 37^ cts. 



T those for table fruit. f are 50 cts. 



O those that are for ornament. + are 75 cts. 



Those marked thus •[ are -Si. 



N. B. Where no price is named by the hundred, a discount of a third in price" willjbe 

 made when 50 to 100 are taken of one kind. 



