t 30 ) 



The following are new kinds of great celebrity; many of which, on acco«ut 

 of their large size, productiveness, or flavour, have been figured and de- 

 scribed in the Transactions of the London Horticultutal Society, and 

 other publications. The difficulty of importing the new kinds alive, some 

 cf which have been received the sixth time before successful, rendeis it 

 necessary to charge a higher price for them until more fully increased. 



Those marked thus t 50 cents per dozen. 



Those not marked, 1 dollar per dozen. 



14 Keen's large seedling 



15 Keen's imperial 



16 Riack 



17 Bath scarlet 



18 iNew, or black musk hautbois 



19 :t:Downton 



20 Knight's No. 14 



521 tHoseberry, very productive 



22 Bostock 



23 4:Montreuil 



24 tFrench musk hautbois, very pro 



due live 



25 Prolific hautbois 



26 Large scarlet Lima, very fine 



27 Muthven castle 



28 Southborough seedling 



29 Duke of Kent's scarlet 



30 Grove-end scarlet 



31 Nairn's sci.rlet 



32 Faulkner's new starlet pine 



33 VVilmoi's superb, 1 dollar for two 



plants, or 5 dollars per dozen 



GRAPES. Vignes. Vitis vinifera. 



Class, Pentandria. Order, Monojynia^ 



Those marked thus * 37^ cenis each. 

 •j: 50 cents each. 

 t 75 cents -each. 

 ^ 1 dollar each- 



T denotes celebrated table grapes. 



W celebrated wine grapes. 



1) those figured in Duhammel 



L those from the garden of the Luxembourg, 



"j'he above prices are for single plants, or where a few vines only are 

 wanted. Those who wish to establish vineyards, and consequently desire 

 a great number, will be supplied at a great reduction from these prices. 

 The foreign grapes included in the following assortment are reared from 

 plants imported direct ivoia the most celebrated collections in France, 

 Germany, Italy, the Crimea, &c ; and 207 varieties are the identical 

 kinds cuUivate'd at the Royal Garden of the Luxembourg at Paris, an 

 •stablishment formed by royal patronage for the purpose of concentrating 

 :ill the most valuable fruits of France, and testing their respective merits. 

 They will be found enumerated in the catalogue of that establishment, 

 and a large portion of the foreign grapes will be found in the works of 

 13uhammel, Chaptal, Speechley, Forsyth, &f. and in the Treatise on 

 Horticulture recently published by myself Their identity with those 

 described is expressly guaranteed, and many of them will be found to 

 differ essentially from grapes cultivated under similar names in some 

 parts of the United States, as in many instances the possessors of grapes 

 of doubtful origin have attached to them the names of old established 

 fruits, or have made their imyiortations from persoiis abroad who have 

 deceived them ; and on this point I am happy to say, that the experience 

 of a long course of years has brought me into correspondence with those 

 who are above deception. But to place their identity beyond the possi- 

 l)ility of doubt, specimen vines of every kind have been planted out for 

 ])earing, and persons desirous of seeirg the fruit can view them at the 



