ROCHESTER COMMERCIAL NURSERIES. 
13 
100,000 Roses, 2 y 2 Inch Pots. 
Climbing Victor Verdier. 
Climbing Jules Margotten. 
Caroline de Sansel. 
Empress of China. 
John Hopper. 
Lady Helen Stewart. 
Louis Odier. 
Mme. Chas. Wood. 
Marie Bauman. 
Triomphe de 1* Exposition. 
Clio. 
Doctor Andry. 
Baron Bonstetten. 
Glory of Margotten. 
John Keynes. 
La Reine. 
Mme. Trotter. 
Mme Plantier. 
Salet Moss. 
White Moss. 
Vicks Caprice. 
Price $4 #o per i.oo. 
SPECIALTIES AND NOVELTIES. 
150,000 FIRST-CLASS APPLES. 
We have for sale, this spring, over one hundred and fifty thousand first-class 
apple trees in more than a hundred varieties. The following sorts wo can offer in 
lots of 1,000 or over—Baldwin, Ben Davis, Boiken—a yellow winter variety—keeps 
till May, bears fruit every year and is of iron-clad hardiness, Cooper’s Market, Early 
Harvest, the highest flavored early apple. Early Strawberry. Fallawater, one of the 
very largest and handsomest apples. Gann, Gideon, an iron-clad winter apple, orig¬ 
inating in Minnesota, fruit very much resembles Yellow Bellfleur. Gravenstoin, a 
most delicious fruit, skin red, flesh as white as the Snow Apple. Grimes Golden, 
Jonathan, King. Lawver, Limber Twig, Maidens Blush, Mammoth Black Twig, Mann, 
Missouri Pippin, Northern Spy, North Western Greening, Ontario. Pewaukee, Red 
Astrachan, Rhode Island Greening, Rome Peauty, Salome, Smith’s Cider, Summer 
Rambo. Stark, Winesap, Wolfe River, Yellow Transparent, York Imperial, Yellow 
Belleffour. 
[See page 2.] 
BLACKBERRIES— We mention only two varieties, Erie — a fine, large and 
very profitable market berry, and Rathbun, which is the largest sized Blackberry 
ever introduced. [See page 2] 
ORNAMENTAL TREES. 
A FEW VERY RAPID GROWING TREES, 
Especially valuable for planting where quick results are wanted. We mention 
them here according to the relative rapidity of their growth, the most rapid 
grower being named first: 
CAROLINA POPLAR — Often grows ten feet in a single pea°on; for screening un¬ 
sightly buildings, or for giving quick shade either on the lawn or along streets and 
avenues it is invaluable. It is being planted largely on the cleared mountain sides 
of Pennsylvania for the purpose of making wood pulp. A crop can be had in fifteen 
years. [See pages 6 and 10.] 
