GGNeRHL CKTHLOGUe. 
APPLES. 
Very many varieties can be furnished which are not here named, 
but the most desirable kinds are as follows: — for summer: Astrachan, 
Early Harvest, Sweet Bough, and Williams; for fall: Gravenstein, 
Fameuse, and Porter; for winter: Baldwin, Danver's Sweet, Golden 
Russet, Hubbardston, King, Lady, Northern Spy, Rhode Island 
Greening, Roxbury Russet, Spitzenberg, and Tolman's Sweet; for 
crabs: Hyslop and Transcendent. Fine thrifty trees 6 to 8 ft., 37^ 
cents each; #3 per dozen; orchard size, $ 12 per hundred. 
Murphy Apple. The fruit of this variety is of superlative beauty, 
of good size, " better than the Baldwin," ripens in December 
and January, but can be kept till April. The tree bears regu- 
larly every year, and an experienced and most careful judge says 
of it that he " does not know an out about it," and he regards 
it as exceedingly valuable. I shall reserve fuller descriptions and 
certificates until next season, but now offer a limited number of 
one-year grafts at 50 cents each. 
PEARS. 
Following are the leading kinds : — for summer : Clapp, Gifford, and 
Rostiezer; for fall: Bartlett, Belle, Lucrative, Bosc, Cornice, Duchesse, 
Dana's Hovey, Howell, Louise Bonne, Seckel, and Sheldon; for 
winter: Anjou, Josephine des Malines, Lawrence, and Nelis. Fine 
standards, three years from bud, 75 cents each; $6 per dozen. Se- 
lected, jfi each. Bearing trees, Si. 50 to $3 each. Dwarfs of Anjou, 
Duchesse, and Louise Bonne, 50 cents; extra size, at 75 cents and 
$1; smaller sizes, $15 to $30 per hundred. 
Idaho. A new chance seedling, originating near Lewiston, Idaho, 
and claiming to be hardy and vigorous. The report of the Ameri- 
can Pomological Society for 1889 has this to say of it: "It is 
very large and handsome; irregular globular; somewhat depressed. 
