THE ILLINOIS E^HMEH. 



er 



Couitensed Catalogue ol 



FRDIT AND ORMBEMAL TREES, PLANTS, &c., 



CULTIVATED AXT) FOR SALE AT THE 

 EVERGREENS, Lamoille, Bureau co., Illinois, 



BT SAMUEL EDWARDS. 



Specimen orchards were commenced in 1844, and number 

 several thousand trees. Some 150 varieties have fruited. 

 Genuineness of varieties as labeled, guaranteed. 



Strawberries, Currants, Gooseben-ies and Rhubarb, are cul- 

 tivated largely for market, and plants can be furnished in 

 quantities at very low rates. 



Much attention has been given to the cultivation of Ever- 

 greens, for screens from the bleak winds of the prairies ; some 

 good specimens of which can be shown, of sufficient site to 

 demonstrate their practical value. Nearly fifty varieties have 

 been tested, as many as forty-five of which are recommended 

 by Eastern Nurserymen. Very many of them are worthless 

 here. Twenty-two varieties were awarded the first premium 

 and a gratuity at the State Fair, Centralia, 1858; 30 varieties 

 were awarded the first premium in 18.59. 



The present stock numbers 150,000, from three inches to 

 fifteen feet in height — the larges sizes several times transplant- 

 ed. They are more valuable for planting on the Prairies than 

 trees from Eastern Nurseries, as it requires from two to three 

 years for trees to become thrifty here, when brought from 

 different soil and climate, besides the saving of freight and 

 loss. From opening of ground in the spring till buds are 

 opened, is a good time for planting Evergreens; also, from the 

 middle of August to the latter part of September, and for very- 

 large specimens in winter, with ball of frozen earth, is the best 

 time.* 



All orders from a distance will be securely packed, for which 

 cost only will be charged. Customers will please to give full 

 directions as to route, consignees, Ac. No charge for deliver- 

 ing at R. R. Depot, Mendota, or Arlington, after which our 

 responsibility ceases. Terms cash. 



SAMUEL EDWARDS. 



*For hints to snccessfal culture of Trees and Plants on the 

 Prairies, I would refer to Chase's Hand Books on Fruit Culture 

 and Evergreens, published by S. C. Griggs* Co., Chicago; 

 sold by all booksellers, and at this Nursery. 



Fruit Trees. 



Apples. 



Summer— Carolina Red June, Early Harvest, Keswick Cod- 

 lin. Sweet Jane, Early Pennock, etc. 



Autumn— Maiden's Blush, Hawley, Snow, Fulton Strawber- 

 ry, Lowell, etc. 



Wi.VTER — Yellow Bellflower, Rawle's Janet, Domine, Wine- 

 sap, Willow Twig, Fulton, Red Romanite, etc. 



Standard Trees, six to ten feet high, $12 60 per hundred. 

 Dwarf trees, 30o each. 



Pears. 



Standard and Ihrsrf Tree* of best torts, 50 cents e«clu 



Cherries. 



Early Richmond, Reine Hortense, Belle de Choisey, English 

 Morello, May Duke, Belle Magnifique, Carnation. Donna Sla- 

 ria, Plumstone Morolla. Trees, 50 cents each. The Heart 

 and Bizarreau Cherries do not succeed well on the Prairies. 



Grapes. 



Isabella, 10 to 25 cents. 



Gooseberries. 

 English varieties, f 2 per dozen. Houghton's Seedling, and 

 Pale Red or Cluster, never mildew, abundant bearers, |1 35 

 per dozen, $6 per hundred, $50 per thousand. 

 Itaspben-ies. 



Allen $1 60 per dozen, $7 per hundred. American Black 

 Cap 75 cents per dozen, $4 per hundred. American White 

 Cap 75 cents per dozen. Brinkle's Orange $3 per doz. Red 

 Antwerp, fine, $1 per dozen. Cincinnati Red, very hardy, 50 

 cents per dozen, $3 per hundred, $16 per thousand. Allen's 

 Prolific, Belle de Fontenay, Marvel of Four Seasons, each 

 $1 50 per dozen. 



Currants. 



Cherry, Attractor, White Grape, Champagne, Chasselas, 

 Fertile de Palnau, Fertile de Angers, Prince Albert, Belle of 

 St. Giles, twenty-five cents each, or two dollars per dozen. 

 White Dutch, Victoria, Red Grape, Silver Striped, Magnum 

 Bonum, Wilmot's Grape, Knight's Large Red, 15 cents each, 

 $1 50 per dozen. Red Dutch, Black English, or Black Na- 

 ples, Common White, Missouri Large Fruited, ten cents each, 

 75 cents per dozen, $5 per hundred, $40 per thousand. 



Lawton Blackbbbrt — 25 cents each, $2 per dozen, $8 per 

 hundred, $60 per thousand. 



Straicberries. 



Necked Pine, 10 cents per dozen, 50 cents per hundred, $3 

 per thousand. Hooker, Wilson's Albany, 25 cents per dozen, 

 $1 50 per hundred. Hovey'f Seedling, Longworth's Prolific, 

 McAvoy's Superior, Early Scarlet, Jenning's Seedlings, Mon- 

 roe Scarlet, Jenny Moyamensing, 20c per dozen, $1 per hun- 

 dred — my selection $6 per thousand. 



Asparagus — 2 year old roots, 50c per hundred, $4 per 

 thousand; 3 year old roots, 75c per hundred, $6 per thousand. 



lihiibarb. 



Linnseus, Downing's Colossal, Myatt's Victoria, Tobolsk, 

 Royal Albert, 20c each, $2 per dozen, $8 per hundred. 

 Scotch Hybrid, none better, 15c each, $1 per dozen, $5 per 

 hundred, $45 per thousand. Cahoon's Seedling, largest, roots 

 liable to rot, 50c each, $4 per dozen. 

 Hedge Plants. 



Osage Orange, two years old |2 per thousand. Buckthorn, 

 two years, $6 per thousand. Osier Willow, Viminalis, Pur- 

 purea, Beveridge and Golden, cuttings, 6- c per 100, $3 per 

 thousand. 



Scions. 



Apple 10 cents per dozen, 30 cents per hundred, $2 50 per 

 thousand, $20 per ten thousand. Pear, Plum and Cherry $1 

 per hundred, $6 per thousand. 



Ornanuntal and Deciduous Trees. 



name of tree. yT.niGH. each. doz. hchd 



Abele, silver 3 to 6 $1 00 $ 5 



" ....6to 1025c 2 00 10 



Purple Fringe Tree 30c 



Ash, European 5 to 6 26c 3 00 12 



Birch, white European 5 to 6 2.'>c 2 00 14 



Butternut 4 to 8 26c 2 50 18 



Black Walnut 4 to 8 36c 2 00 18 



Elm, American white 6 to 8 2.50 9 50 18 



Elm, European 3 to 6 25c 2 50 15 



Larch, European 4 to 6 2.5c 2 50 15 



Larch, American 8 to 6 25c 2 50 16 



Maple, American silver leaved 8 to 10 30c 3 50 25 



** ** '* 6 to 8 25c 2 50 15 



Mountain Ash, European ! '. ! .8 to 10 50c 4 00 80 



" " " 6 to 8 30c 2 50 75 



" •• " 6 to 6 20c 2 00 10 



" " oakleaved 6 to 8 60c 8 50 



" " weeping 8 to 10 $1 



Poplar, Lombardy 8 to 12 30c 3 00 18 



Willow, gold barke d 6 t o 8 25c 2 50 15 



Evergreens, 



At Retail, except where noted. 25 cts. per foot for Good 



Specimens. 

 ^ American Arbor Vitae, Balsam Fir, Red Cedar, Austrian 

 Pine, Scotch Pine, AVhite Pine, Hemlock, Norway Sp»uce, 

 White Spmce, Irish Juniper; Evergreen Cypress. 



Rhododendron, $1; Sabin's Pine, $1 50; Beatham's Pine, 

 <1 5;; PinusTuberculata, $2; Savin, Holly. 



Small Evergreens. 



Native, assorted, one year bedded, six to twelve Inches, one 

 dollar per dozen, four dollars per hundred, twenty-five dolls, 

 per thousand. Norway Spruce, three years transplanted, 

 three dollars per hundred, five dollars per thousand. 

 Shrubbery, <fcc. 



KACa. BOZ. 

 Roses, a good assortment Hybrid Perpetual, Moss, 



June and Climbing 25to50c 



Berberry Red and Purple 25c 



Honeysuckles, upright and climbing 25c $2 00 



Lilac, purple 25 2 00 



Lilac, white 25 2 00 



Spireas, assorted 25 1 50 



Japan Quince 30 3 00 



African Tamarix 25 2 00 



Snow Ball 25 2 00 



Weigelea Rosea 25 2 00 



Wistsria 25 200 



Flowering Currants 25 2 00 



Flowering Almond 24 200 



Lilies, assorted. Phloxes, assorted, 15 to 25 cents each. 



Sweet Potato, Cabbage, Tomato and Egg Plants at usual 

 artes. mh2m 



leces 



A$ accidents will happen, even in welt regulated families, it it 

 fery desirable to have some cheap and convealent way for reptdring 

 Furniture, Toys. Crockery, &c. 



SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE 



meets all such emergencies, and no household can afford to be with- 

 out it. It is always ready and up to the sticking point. There Is ito 

 longer a necessity for limping chairs, splintered veneers, headlea 

 (".oils and broken cradles. It is just the article for cone, shell and 

 other ornamental work, so popular with 2adies of refinement anc] 

 taste. 



This admirable preparation Is used cold, being chemically held In 

 BTilution, and possessing all the valuable qualities of the best cabinet 

 makers' glue. It may be used in the place of ordinary mucilage, 

 being vastly mere adheave. 



"USEFUL IN EVERY HOUSE." 



27. B.— A. brush accompanies each bottle. Pjuok, S6 cnts. 



Wholesale Depot, 48 Cedar-st., New York. 



ftddreia 



HENRY C. SPALDING & CO. 



Box No. 3600 New York. 



Put up for dealers in cases containing four, eteht and twelve doz 

 en— a beautif\il lithographic show card accompanying each package. 



I»-A single bottle of SPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE 

 will save ten times its cost annually to every household,.^! 



Sold by all prominent Stationers, Druggists, Hardware and Fur- 

 niture dealers, Grocers and Fancy Stores. 



Country Merchants should make a note of SPALDING'S PRE- 

 PAREJy iJLUK when making up their list. It will stand «.tiv 

 climate 



SPRINGFIELD NURSERY. 



THIS NURSERY WAS ESTABLISHED IN 

 1858. It is one mile southeast of the capitol, on South 

 Eighth street, near the machine shop of the Great Western 

 Railroad. The stock covers ten acres with Apples, Pears, 

 Cherries, Plums, Peaches, Apricots, Nectarines, Quinces) 

 Grapes, Currants, Gooseberries, Raspberries, Strawberries, 

 Blackberries, Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, Evergreens, Roses, 

 Bulbous and Herbaceous Plants, &c., 4c. 



Address Springfield, 111., R. J. HUBBELL, Proprietor. 



marl-2m J. B. SPAULDING, Agent. 



GREAT REDUCTION TO CLUBS! 



SUBSCRIBE NOW FOR THB 



IllinoisState Journal, 



A reliable Newspaper, and a faittiful advocate of Reprib' 



lican principles — P ublish^ at Sprinnfield, Illinois, 



BY BAILHACHE k BAKEB. 



The season for forming clubs is at hand, and in order to 

 enable our friends to compete with the agents of Eastern 

 publications we have determined to offer the Weekly Jouksai. 

 at the following low prices, for the next thirty days : 



TERMS TO CLUBS — CASH IN ADVANCB. 



Six copies for one year $7 CO 



Ten " " 12 00 



Fifteen " «' ....16 60 



Twenty" " .....,.., 20 00 



Thirty " " 80 00 



AU persons sending clubs often, fifteen and twenty sabscri- 

 bers at the above rates, will be entitled to an extra copy free; 

 and all persons sending clubs of thirty subscril>er8, shall re- 

 ceive two extra copies of the paper free, or a copy of Godey'g 

 Lady's Book for 1860, if preferred. We hope our friends will 

 respond liberally in view of the above reduction of rates. 

 Each paper will be addressed to the person for whom it is in- 

 tended, and will be forwarded to any desired post ofiSce. 



^^ ClergjTnen and teachers 8ui)plied at $1 a year. 



^^~ Money inclosed in registered letters sent at our risk. 

 Address BAILHACHE k BAKER, 



dec80 Springfield, lU. 



DUNLAP'S NURSERY. 



4D^ Acres in Trees and Plants. 



EMBRACING THE USUAL NURSERY 

 stock, all of which will be sold low for cash. Orders 

 for Spring planting should be be sent in early. 6,000 two year 

 old . 



■ SILVER MAPLES 



for timber belts, can be had at $5 per 100. 



J. B. Whitney, of Chatham, Sangamon county, is the agent 

 for Sangamon and neighboring counties. Catalogues had on 

 opplication. Address M. L. DUNLAP, 



febl West Urbana, Champaign Ce., His. 



200,000 SILVER MAPLE SEEDLINGS. 



I BEG LEAVE TO CALL THE ATTEN- 

 TION of Nurserymen to the following list of cash prices 

 for my one year old Silver Maple seedlings. They are strong 

 thrifty plants, ranging in height from 8 to 24 inches, being of 

 suitable size for boxing and shipping to a distance. 

 $1 50 per hundred, 

 $6 00 per thousand, 

 $65 per ten thousand, 

 $100 per twenty thousand. 

 When purchasers do not remit with their orders, satisfactory 

 reference or a a good indorsed note, payable at some bank will 

 be required. 



I have for sale a large stock of Peach trees, one year old 

 from b«d, 4 to 6 feet high, of the best market varieties; Stan- 

 dard and Dwarf Pears; Standard and Dwarf Cherries on 

 Mahaleb stock; Standard and Dwarf Apples; Apricots, Necta- 

 rines, Almonds, Grapes, Blackberries, Strawberries, Ac, and 

 a fine stock of Deciduous and Evergreen ornamental trees of 

 all kinds. 



Catalogues for planters and trade lists for nurserymen will 

 be sent on application. 

 Address, ISAAC PULLEN, 



febl-2m Hightstown, Mercer County, N. J. 



SWEET POTATOES 



FOR SEED, 



TEE NANSEMOND ^ 



SWEET POTATOE IS THE ONLY VAR- 

 IETY that has given entire satisfaction In the Northwest. 

 My stock now on hand is large and of the best quality. 



I want fifty agents to eprout on shares in such parts of the 

 West not yet supplied. All such applicants will be required 

 to give good refferences. Directions for sprouting will be 

 sent to all customers. 



I regret to learn that some have sent out late maturing 

 varieties, resembling the Nansemond in color, much to the 

 damage of this productive and early maturing variety. 



Prices low; no charge for delivery at Terra Haute Railroad 

 Depot. Address, 



A J. W. TENBROOK, 

 febl Bockville, Indiana 



FAIRBANKS' 



PATEKT 



SCALES 



OF ALL KINDS. 



Fairbanks & Greenleaf, 



85 Lake Street, Chicago, 

 Sold in Springffeld by 

 mayl-ly E. B. PEASE. 



EVERGREENS. 



THE SUBSCRIBErToFFERS at WHOLE- 

 sale and retail a good assortment of native and foreign 

 Evergreens adapted to cultivation on the prairie. Specie 

 mens exhibited at the two last fairs of the State Agricultural 

 Society received the first premiums. Also, 



Frnitand Ornamental Trees, 



SHRUBS, VINES AND PLANTS, 



Strawberries, currants, raspberries, blackberries, rhubarb, 

 asparagus roots, osage orange and buckthorn, sweet potato 

 plants, &c. 



PRICES LOW— TERMS CASK .; 

 Catalogues furnished on application. 



SAMUEL EDWARDS. 

 The Evergreens, Lamoille, Bureau Co., 111., marl -2m 



