,18 
No 
Ellwanger & Barry's 
Color. Form. Texture. Season. 
,31 
32 
33 
34 
35 
36 
3 
38 
39 
40 
41 
42 
43 
44 
45 
46 
47 
48 
Early Richmond, or 
Kentish 
Florence 
Fellow's Seedling — 
Gridley 
Herfoidshire, White 
Late Duke 
May Duke 
Montmorency (See early 
Richmond) 
Morello 
Sugar 
Spanish Weichsel 
Sparhawk's Honey 
Transparent Guigne 
Tradescant's bl'k Heart 
or Elkhorn 
Waterloo 
White Tartarian 
White French Guigne. . 
Wilkinson 
Weeping, [beautiful] . . . 
p y 1 
b 
w r 
d r 
r 
p y 
b 
b 
p y 
p y 
roundish 
hea 
roundish 
hea 
obt h 
obt h 
roundish 
roundish 
heart 
hea 
obt h 
obt h 
rou 
hea 
tender 
firm 
firm 
tender 
tender 
tender 
tender 
tender 
tender 
e May 
e June 
e June 
June 
July 
m June 
e July 
m June 
e June 
b July 
firm e July 
h tender e June 
h tender! June 
tender 
tender 
June 
b July 
Esteemed for tarts and drying. 
Large, sweet, and good. 
Very productive and good. 
Very good. 
Valuable. 
Greatly esteemed. 
First rate for cooking. 
Good, but acid. 
Sweet and fine late sort. 
Beautiful and good. 
Large and good. 
Productive and good. 
Beautiful ; poor bearer. 
Small. 
■sprightly, and fine flavor. 
Very ornamental. 
LIST OF CHERRIES, 
In the course of propagation, and which will not be for sale till the fall of 1847. 
Admirable de Soissons, Flesh Colored Bigarreau, 
Belle d' Orleans, Holland Bigarreau, 
de Voiserie, Knight's Early Black, 
De Prusse, Louis Philippe, 
Donna Maria, Le Mercier, 
Downton, Late Black Guigne, 
De Dampierre, Manning's White Mazzard, 
Du Nord, Nouvelle, Merville de September, 
New Morello, Reine Hortense, 
Early Black Bigarreau, Tardive d' Argental, 
Early Purple Guigne, White Ox Heart. 
PEACHES, 
Price, 25 Cents Each— $18 to 
100. 
The Peach is unsurpassed by any other fruit of the garden or orchard, in richness and beauty of 
appearance and delicious qualities; and nowhere in America can it be grown with less trouble or in 
greater perfection than in a large portion of Western New York. 
The products of the orchards in this vicinity, the present season, as well as of the small gardens 
in this city, could not easily be surpassed. The increased attention which has been given to its 
culture for a few years back, and which is now given to it, will soon make our section as famous 
for its peaches as its apples. 
There is every inducement for the culture of the Peach here on a large scale. We are surroun^ 
ded by great tracts of country where it cannot be grown, and every facility exists, that could be de- 
sired for transporting fruit to all parts. 
