500 GRASSES AND OTHER PLANTS USED IN FARMING, &c. 
Ray, English 
Saint-Foia , 
Sweet scented vernal 
Timothy 
Trefoil 
Lolium perervne (rich and tolerable moist) 
Hedysarum Onobrychis {dry deep soil, but 
ansvjers well on poor ground) 
Anthoxanthum odoratum{moderately dry) 
Phleum pratense (moist and upland) 
Medicago lupulina 
GRAINS, &c. 
Barley, Spring 
Winter 
Two-rowed 
Naked 
Buckwheat 
Corn, Indian 
Guinea 
Broom 
Millet, Large 
German 
Italian 
Oat, Cultivated 
Varieties, 1. White. 2. Black. 
3. Brown. 4. Potato. 5. Po- 
land. 6. Friezland, 7. Siberian. 
8. Tartarian. 
Oat, Naked 
Oriental 
Peas, Field 
Rye, Spring 
Winter 
Upland 
Rice, Common 
Tares, Common 
*Tobacco, Virginian 
Teasel, Fuller's 
Wheat, Spring 
Winter 
Eg]rptian 
Weld, Dyer's 
Woad, do. 
Liquorice, Common 
Hordeum vulgare 
hexastichon 
distichon 
v. nudum 
Polygonum Fagopyrura 
Zea Mays 
Holcus Sorghum 
saccharatus 
Panicum miliaceum 
Germanicum 
Italicum 
Avena Sativa 
Avena nuda 
orientalis 
Pisum sativum 
Secale cereale v. vernum, 
V. hybernum 
V. montanum 
Oryza sativa (c) 
Vicia sativa 
Nicotiana Tabacum 
Dipsaxhus fullonum 
Triticum csstivum 
hybernum 
compositum 
Resed^a luteola 
Isatis tinctoria 
Glycyrrhiza glabra 
ROOTS, &c. 
Potatoes, Common 
tSweet 
Scarcity Root 
Rhubarb, True 
Turnip, Common 
Swedish, or Ruta Baga, a 
variety 
Solanum tuberosum 
Convolvulus Batatas 
Mangel wurtzel 
Rheum Palmatwm, 
Brassica Rapa 
ARTICLES FOR MANUFACTURING. 
♦Cotton 
Flax 
Hemp 
Gossypium herbaceum 
Linum usitatissimum 
Cannabis saliva 
middle or eastern states. The Avena elatior or tall oat-grass, is, by mistake, called 
Peruvian and Andes grass in tlie county of Delaware, near Pliiladelphia, and in part 
of ihe state of Delaware, where it is cultivated; it is called meadow oats about Lan- 
caster, Pennsylvania. 
(c) There is a variety of this that grows well on diy lands, which is now cultivated 
near the Muskingum and in other parts of the United States, and is likely to become, 
of considerable importance. 
