THE ALMOND, .- 233 
in the valley of the Ohio and Tennessee it would be likely to suo 
ceed admirably. 
Common Atmonp. Thomp. Lind. 
A. ¢. dulcis. Dee. 7 
Amandier a Petit Fruit, 
ae ; 0. Duh. 
*Amande commune. 
Common Sweet. 
This is the common Sweet Almond of. France and the south 
of Europe, and is one of the most hardy and productive sorta 
here. Nuts hard, smooth, about an inch- and a quarter long, 
compressed and pointed, of an agreeable flavour, but inferior to 
the following. Flowers expand before the leaves. Ripens last 
of September. 
Tur Lone Harv-Sueit Aumonp. i 
Amandier a gros fruit: 0, Duh. 
—_ dur. Nois. 
A variety with handsome large, pale rose coloured flowers, 
opening before the leaves, and large and long fruit a third longer 
than other varieties. The stone is about as large as the soft- 
shell variety, but the kernel*is larger and plumper. This is a 
good hardy sort, and it is very ornamental when in blossom, - 
Ripens about the last of September. A 
Sort-Saer, Sweet Aumonp. Lind, 
Doux 4 coque tendre. } : 
Sultan 4 coque tenire. anette 
Amandier 4 coque tendre. 0. Duh. 
— des Dames. N. Duh, Poit. 
: Amandier des Dames, ; Noiseite. 
Ou Amande Princesse. 
Ladies’ Thin Shell. 
The Soft-Shell or Ladies’ Almond, is the finest of all the al- 
monds. It is the very variety common in the shops of the con- 
fectioners, with a shell so thin as to be easily crushed between 
the fingers, and the kernel of which is so highly esteemed at the 
dessert. It ripens early in the season, and is also highly es- 
teemed in a young or fresh state, being served on the table for 
this purpose about the middle of July in Paris. The blossoms 
of this variety expand at the same time with the leaves, and are 
more deeply tinged with -red_ than the foregoing. Several 
varieties are made of this in France, but they are (as quoted 
above) all essentially the same. 
Fruit two inches long, oval, compressed. The nut is’ more 
