14 ROOTS. SCIONS AND CUTTINGS. BOOKS. DECIDUOUS ORNAMENTAL TREES. 



ESCULENT BOOTS, &c. 



Asparagus, Giant, 1 to 3 years old, 



, do. per 1000,' ^4 to 



, Large Dutch, 1 to 3 



j'ears old, 

 , do do. per 1000, 



$6 to $7, 

 Artichoke, Jerusalem, 



, Green Globe, 



Cardoon, 

 Horse Radish, 

 Dyer's jMadder, 

 Hops, 

 Liquorice, 

 Sea Kale, 



Rhubarb for Tarts, or Pie-Plant, 

 Rhapontic, tolerably good 

 Early Tobolsk, large pjfik 

 stalks, very early 



leach.' Doz. 



37 

 2 5f 

 2 5(1 



.S7 



2 50 

 oC 



3 00 

 1 50 



1 2.5 



Hundred;^ 



37 to 75|i Rhubarb, Wilmot's Early Red, red 

 stalks, early, ! 

 Giant, or Goliath, very 

 75to;gl large stalks, matures 



after the two preced- 



2 00 

 15 00 

 15 OO 



2 50 

 10 00 



2 50 



10 00 



8 or 



2 OOl 12 00 



eac!), 

 20 



Myatt's.. Victoria, enor- 

 mous stalks, red, 

 Dalley's new scarlet Gi-I 

 ant, very early, 



Admiral, 



Buck's Early Scarlet, 

 Leviathan, enormous 

 stalks, succeeds the 

 early kinds. 



Colossal, 

 Wagnum Bonura, 

 Marshall's Early. 



Doz. Hundred 

 2 00 15 00 



Note. H'e are prepared to supply Rhubarb Planis by the thousand. 



1 00 

 50 

 75 

 75 



2 00 



2 00 



7 50 

 6 00 

 6 00 



10 OOl 



14 00 

 12 00 



SCIONS AND CUTTINGS. 



Scions of all kinds of Fruit Trees, enumerated in this Catalogue, as well as of others not enumerated herein, 

 suitable for grafting, will be supplied when 40 or more kinds are ordered, more or less of each, as conveni- 

 ent to us, at 25 cents per parcel, or at 50 cents per dozen of each variety, where the price of a tree does 

 not exceed that sum (50 cents ;) but where it does, the same price will be charged for the dozenscions, or 

 for a parcel where the kind is very rare, as for a tree of the same kind. Of all the varieties of Apples 

 generally in cultivation, t)^ parcels at 25 cents will each contain a dozen scions. When an order is sent 

 Tot a small assortment of rare kinds only, no charge will be made under 50 cents per parcel. When a large 

 number of scions are wanted of the more plentiful sorts of Fruits, they will be supplied by the 100 or 1000 

 at reduced rates. It is better that such orders be sent in the fall or winter, and the Scions can he forwarded 

 hy express if so ordered. 



Our specimen Orchards are the only very extensive ones on this island, and the trees are mostly of large 

 size, and have borne fruit for years, by which their accuracy is rendered certain. 



Scions of Grapes of a number of the finest kinds, can be supplied if applied for in season, at from $3 to $10 

 per 100, or in less quantities, hut in no case will scions of any variety be sent to a less amount than the 

 price of a vine ; and of the very rare varieties, three scions, and of others six scions of any one variety 

 will be considered equivalent in value to a vine. Scions of Isabella, Catawba, Alexander, and several 

 other varieties of Grapes, ^10 to !ft'20 per 1000. 



Scions of Currants, Gooseberries, Raspberries, Berberries, Mulberries, Quinces, Figs, Poplars, Willows, and 

 of all other trees and shrubs that can be grown from cuttings, will be supplied at prices in proportion to 

 their respective value ; hut no charge is made of a less sum than the price of a tree or a shrub oi the same 

 kind. 



Scions of thftfine species of Osiers, or Willows, most celebrated for hasket-making, can he supplied, suitable 

 for planting hedge-rows, at from $2 50 per 100, or §'20 per 1000. Especial pains have been taken during 

 several years past, to obtain the very best varieties of Osiers from England, France, and Germany, in 

 order to supersede hy home production the great importation of this article, for which our wet lands (now 

 almost useless) are particularly appropriate. 



CATALOGUES AND BOOKS. 



No. 1. Descriptive Catalogue of Fruit Trees, Shrubs and Plants — No. 2. Hardy Ornamental Trees, Shrubs 

 and Plants. (The two preceding are now united.) No. 3. Bulbous and Tuherous-rooted Flowering Plants, 

 Dahlias, &c. — No. 4. Green-house Plants — .No. 5. American Indigenous Trees, Plants and Seeds. — No. 6. 

 Garden, Agricultural, and Flower Seeds. — No. 7. Do. do. do. in French. — No. 10. Descriptive Catalogue of 

 Roses, comprising 1600 varieties. — No. 12. New Wholesale Catalogue for Nurseries of Fruit and Ornamental 

 Trees, Shrubs, Plants, &c. — No. 13. Catalogue of Pears, of all sizes, on the Angers and Portugal Quince. — 

 No. 14. — Supplement Catalogue of Roses, wiih reduced prices forall kinds — No. 15. Herbaceous Flowering 

 Plants, Caniations, &c. — No. 16. New Catalogue of Strawberries, for 1848 and 1849. The Descriptive Cat- 

 alogue of Fruits in addition to the Size, Color, Maturity, &c., comprises the Glands and Blossoms of every 

 Peach. These Catalogues, (36th Edition,) when applied for, postpaid, are sent to purchasers of trees gratis, 

 and to others at $1 per set. 



BOOKS.— Prince's Treatise on Horticulture, 75 cents ; Treatise on the Vine, $1 50; Treatise on Fruits, 

 or Pomological Manual, containing descriptions of 800 varieties of Fruits, §'2; Prince's Manual of Roses, 

 cloth hound, 75 cents ; 



DECIDUOUS ORNAMENTAL TREES. 



The following comprise a Select Assortment of the most heautiful and estimable species, which our long 

 experience has enabled us to arrange with precision. The inferior species are omitted. 



We have divided them into four classes. The first class comprises those of majestic growth, which attain 

 great stature and ample development ; the second class, those which attain a medium size ; the third class, 

 those of low stature ; and the fourth class, such as are comparatively of slow growth, requiring a long period 

 hefore they attain the size of a small tree, and which it would, therefore, he more appropriate in ornament- 

 ing grounds to rank among large shrubs. ' 



