ie ee eS oa ee 
é 31 ) | ‘ 
8 Black walnut - | | . 
oe aoutternut, ii 
_ a0 English red skin filbert, 25 cts- 
11 Do whitedo do Pane oy 
12 Large Spanish = do, Barcelona, or cobniet 
33 American hazlenut, 25 cts. 
> + Geant 
ASPARAGUS. 
Roots jer hundred $i 
Ditto fer thousand $s 
HOP roots fer hundred $5 
a } ere 
ba GRAPES. Vitis vinifera. ve 
€lass, Pentandria. Order, Monogynia. 
$73 Cents, except those noted. 
wT he foreign Grapes incloded in the following assortment are reared from 
plants imported directly from the most celebfated collections in France 
and Germany, mauy of which contain from four to five hundred varie- 
ties, and deseriptions of nearly all of them will be found in the most cele- . 
brated works on the culture of the Vinemsuch as Speechley, Duham-_ 
mel, Forsyth, &e—and also in the Treatise attached to this Catalogue, 
_ Many of them will be found to differ essentially from fruits cultivated un- 
der 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. This practice, so commen in our coun- 
try, and so caleulated to disseminate error, ¢annot be too greatly depre- 
- cated. Ihave also to acknowledge the recent reception of some valuable - 
- German Grapes from that distinguished philanthropist, Col. George Gibbs, 
of Sunswick, Long-Island, which were received by him direct from the 
Government Botanic Garden of Austria, and which are inserted in this 
Catalogue. | 
- © denotes those which ripen well in the city only. 
CC ————- which ripen well both in city and country. | 
 ©CF ———- which succeed in the country in fine seasons, 
is —— celebrated wine grapes. oh 
1 Earliest French, frécoce dela Madeleine, CC August. 
2 Early white muscadine, or summer sweet water,C C do 
3 July wrape, morillon noir hatif, or early black clus- 
12?, © C te : rein — do 
4 *Large black cluster, C C September. 
\ 
