. Descriptive catalogue : fruit and ornamental trees, shrubs, rose, bulbs, Nursery stock Ohio Painesville Catalogs; Flowers Catalogs; Bulbs (Plants) Catalogs; Shrubs Catalogs; Trees Seedlings Catalogs; Plants, Ornamental Catalogs; Fruit trees Seedlings Catalogs; Fruit Catalogs. OF FRUITS, ORNAMENTAL TREES, ETC. 27 ing a bud. Valuable as a nut and ornamental tree, and should be planted in all sections. WALNUT JAPAN, (Max Cordiformis)— Differs from Sieboldi in form of nuts, which are broad, pointed, flattened, resembling somewhat Shellbark Hickory. PERSIMMON, AMERICAN. This makes a very ha


. Descriptive catalogue : fruit and ornamental trees, shrubs, rose, bulbs, Nursery stock Ohio Painesville Catalogs; Flowers Catalogs; Bulbs (Plants) Catalogs; Shrubs Catalogs; Trees Seedlings Catalogs; Plants, Ornamental Catalogs; Fruit trees Seedlings Catalogs; Fruit Catalogs. OF FRUITS, ORNAMENTAL TREES, ETC. 27 ing a bud. Valuable as a nut and ornamental tree, and should be planted in all sections. WALNUT JAPAN, (Max Cordiformis)— Differs from Sieboldi in form of nuts, which are broad, pointed, flattened, resembling somewhat Shellbark Hickory. PERSIMMON, AMERICAN. This makes a very handsome ornamental tree, and is tolerably hardy here. The fruit, although pungent when green, becomes sweet and palatable if allowed to remain on the tree exposed to early MAX CORDIFORMIS. GRAPES. THERE is scarcely a yard so small, either in country or city, that room for from one to a dozen or more grape vines cannot be found. They do admirably trained up by the side of any building, or along the garden fences, occupying but little room and furnishing an abundance of the healthiest of fruits. Make the soil mellow and plant vines somewhat deeper than they stood in the nursery. Plant about eight feet apart, by the fence or building. For vineyards make rows eight feet apart, six to ten feet in rows. We grow annually a large stock. Planters can depend on first-class, heavily-rooted vines, graded to the highest standard. BLACK. CONCORD—A large, purplish-black grape, ripening about the middle of Sept.; vines remarkably vigorous and free from disease. The most popular market variety. EATON—The largest both in bunch and berry; clusters have been exhibited weighing 30 oz.; berries one inch in diameter. Leaf large, thick and leathery; berries round, covered with heavy, blue bloom ; pulp tender, separating freely from the seeds. EARLY OHIO—Briefly its points of merit are extreme earliness, hardiness and productiveness. The berry is black, smaller than Concord, firm in tex


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