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White chasselas, ripe in September.
Black sweet water, ripe in September.
White sweet water, ripe in September.
Black Madeira, ripe in September.
White Frontinac, ripe in September.
Bland's Virginia native grape, ripe in September.
Early white muscadine, or summer white sweet water, fine flavoured, and very great bearer, ripe in September.
Isabella grape, a native, of superior flavour, and very great bearer, ripe in September.
Alexander's grape, hardy, and great bearer, ripe in September.

Figs. -- 50 Cents.
Brown (the best bearer)
Large white

Gooseberries. -- 25 Cents.
[Near two hundred sorts of this fruit have been received from England,
from which the following have been selected on account of
their large size, time of ripening, or flavour; but it will be in vain to
plant the finest gooseberries, if attention is not paid to them after
they are set out. There is no fruit tree that requires so rich a soil;
they should have rotten manure dug in around them every autumn,
and the ground kept mellow and cultivated, and the bushes trimmed,
and tops thinned out moderately every year. If planted in low,
wet, or shady situations, or in too confined a garden, the fruit is apt
to become mouldy, which immediately stops the growth.]
Mammoth green gooseberry, producing the largest
fruit of the kind known of in America 50 cents.

Red.
Alcock's king
Rumbullion
Duke of York
Warrington red
Ironmonger
Shaw's Billy Dean
Red Bulfinch
Large amber
Smooth claret

Green.
Early green hairy
Green Gascoign
Green Walnut
Satisfaction
Green Dorrington
Green chissel
Green Oak
Duke of Bedford
Ribbed green
        