NECTARINES ALMONDS. 



21 



waxen appearance, they may be ranked among the most admired appendages of 

 the dessert. 



C denotes clingstones, or pavies. 



1 Aromatic 



Sept 



2 Argyle 



do 



3 Claremont 



do 



4 Common EIruge P 



Aug 



Elnige or Elrouge 





Oatlands 





5 Dn Tellier's, or Duke de Tdlo 



Ang 



6 Early Violet P 



do 



Petite violette hative 





7 Early Newington C 



do 



Black Newington 





S Fairchild's early yellow P 



do 



Early yellow 





9 French yellow C 60 cts 



Sept 



Brugrion jaune 





10 Golden C P 



do 



11 Green seedling A 





13 Italian brugnon C P 



do 



Brugnon— Italian 





14 Lewis P A 



15 Brompton 



16 Murrey P 



17 Musk violet C P 



Brugnon violet musque 



18 New white (Neat's lohite) 



19 Old Newington C P 



Scarlet Newington 

 Newington 



20 Perkiti's seedling A 



21 Peterborough, Late green P 



22 Piunaston orange 



23 Red Roman C P 



24 Scarlet P 



Early scarlet 1 

 Large Scarlet 1 



25 Temple P 



26 Vermash P 



27 White (Old wliite) C P 



Sept 

 do 

 do 



Sept 



Aug 

 Sept 



Sept 

 do 

 Aug 

 Sept 

 Auff 



The following are very celebrated 

 and 



23 Aiton's seedling C 



29 Amateur's early violet 



30 Cherry, or Cerise P 



31 Despres P 



32 Dov/nion 



33 Early white 



34 French white P 



35 Genoa (Late Genoa) 



36 Laugier (French) 



Aug 

 do 

 do 



varieties, recently introduced from Italy, France 

 Enaland, $1 each. 



Aug 37 Late yellow, Jaune lisse P Oct 



do 38 Large early violet P Sept 

 do Grosse Violette — Grosse violette 

 do hative 



do 39 Montpellier Aug 



do 40 Orange, or Golden C Sept 



do 41 New black C Aug 



42 Syon do 



43 White Brussels 



N-.B. Trees of all kinds can be supplied, if desired, suitable for dwarfs or 



ALMONDS. Amandiers, 



Those marked thus * are 37-^ cents each, or ^30 per hundred. 

 Those not marked are 50 cents, or $40 per hundred. 



Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5, 12, 13, 14, and 16, are the fine kinds cultivated for the table. 

 7, 8, 9, and 10, are ornamental, and 8 and 9 are particularly beautiful. 



Nos 



smeet, and o?ie of the most hardy P 

 P 



1 ^Common bitter hardshell, P 



2 Great Fruited 



Soft shell 



3 Sweet hardshell, 07ie of the most har 



Jordan, — Coque dure 



4 * Ladies' thin shell, (Thin shell) too tender for a 



northern climate, P 

 Amande des dames 



5 White flowering, sweet ' 



6 Large bitter hardshell, Grosse co.ssanle, P 



7 *Dwarf single flowering, P 



8 *Dwarf double flowering, P,ver]/ ornamcntol 



9 Large double flowering, P, Very ornamental 

 10 Caucasian woolly 



3 * 



A.mvgdalus amara 

 macrocarpa 



alba ^ 



maxima 



na7ia 



pumi\a pi. vel sinensis 



communis pi. 



incana 



