[^"f^ 



GEyEBAL CATALOGUE. 



45 



FIGS. 



Price 50 cents each. 



♦^ Angeliqiie— Medinm : skin yellow: flesh rose colored : very good. 



^Black Iscliia — Medium: skin deep purple: flesh sweet, rich. 



•Brown I >cliia— Medium size: rich and excellent. 



»'Ca>tle Kennedy— Very large. 



»'Col. de >iguora'Bianca— Large: skin greenish white: flesh red. 



t^Early Violet— Brownish purple: small: very hardy and bears ahundantly. 



•'Madeleine— Medium size: pale greenish yellow: flesh rose colored: bears abundantly. 



►'Madeleine Early— Large; skin gray : flesh white: very productive. 



»'Preigrn>sata— Small: round; skin purplish brown; flesh deep red: rich and luscious. 



♦'Koi du Noir— Black 



•Tnrkey- Brownish purple; large, rich and excellent. 



>^'hite Genoa— Large; yellowish white: flesh tinted with red: very rich and good. 



Remarks.— Figs may be grown as bushes in the garden, in the Northern States, if they are taken up annually, 

 the first week in November, with a ball of earth attached to the roots, and placed in a cellar till about the middle 

 of May, when they should be taken out and replanted. Most all of them ripen in August. 



MISCELLANEOUS FRUITS. 



Almonds— Su€(t Hard Shell .50 c-ents each. 



Soft Shell 5(1 •• 



Chestnut.s — Common American 5<J "' " 



Spanish, or Marron, very large and 



fine 5<i •• " 



Filberts-+<S'?/ift.'</l Coh .50 " 



TThite .5<» " " 



Mulberry— I>oif/ii/ig's Everbearing .5'J *• " 



Xev: American, one of the best ; 

 hardy; fruit of excellent quality. 



ripe from J una 1 5 to Sept. 20 .50 " " 



^^Tftorhurn, fruit of good quality; 



ripe from July to Sept .5<j ' " 



t^ Troirhridfje, fruit of good quahty ; 



ripe from July to Sept .50 " ' I 



White ri5 - " ' 



TValnut.s— ^4//j6man BZacTc ,50 " " 



American Butternut 50 " " 



English, or Ma/leira Xut .50 " 



i/'English Duarf Proline (Preparturi- 

 ens;. A valuable dwarf variety that 

 bears when quite small Sl.<^'<t " 



f^ 



FRUIT OF ^■EW AMERICAN MULBERKY. 



SCIONS. 



The usual price for two to six scions is according to the scarcity of the variety) the same as for a tree of the 

 same variety. Quantities of the leading varieties, ordered in the winter, will be supplied at the following rates: 



Apple $1 GO per 100 



Pear 150 •■ " 



Plum 2 00 •• " 



Cherrv 1 00 " " 



ESCULENT ROOTS. 



Asparai^s— Co-rtorer's Colossal. 2 vears S2 00 per 100; $10 00 per 1,000 



Mammoth, 2 years. . . . ." 2 00 " " 



Rhubarb 25 cents each; S2 00 per doz.: SIO 00 per 100 



Brabant Colossal 



Early Scarlet: rather small, early, good. 



Eorlij Crimson (E. & B. ■, blood red, tender, rich. 



Early Prince 



Central Taylor. 



Giant. 



Golden Syrup. 



Marshall's Royal Linnceus. 



Magnum Bonum. 

 Paragon. 

 Prince Albert. 

 Sea rle t yonpa red. 

 Songster's Prince of ^Yales. 

 Scorield's Prince Albert. 

 Tub'ohk. 

 Victoria. 



Myatt's Linnceus: the largest and best of all. 



