. McGregor Brothers' wholesale price list of plants for florists for fall of 1897. Nurseries (Horticulture) Ohio Springfield Catalogs; Flowers Catalogs; Bulbs (Plants) Catalogs. s McGregor Brothers' Wholesale Price List, Springfield, COPYRIGHTED*-**!? BY B. ©oleus. Standard Market Sorts-A fine stock of the best and most distinct named kinds. Price, 40 cents per dozen: $2 per hundred. Mixed Varieties—Not named, in endless variety. Price, $ per hundred. New Coleus, Queen of the West—This variety is an improvement on the beautiful new Coleus, Mrs. P. Sander. Large leaf and slig


. McGregor Brothers' wholesale price list of plants for florists for fall of 1897. Nurseries (Horticulture) Ohio Springfield Catalogs; Flowers Catalogs; Bulbs (Plants) Catalogs. s McGregor Brothers' Wholesale Price List, Springfield, COPYRIGHTED*-**!? BY B. ©oleus. Standard Market Sorts-A fine stock of the best and most distinct named kinds. Price, 40 cents per dozen: $2 per hundred. Mixed Varieties—Not named, in endless variety. Price, $ per hundred. New Coleus, Queen of the West—This variety is an improvement on the beautiful new Coleus, Mrs. P. Sander. Large leaf and slightly ser- rated; outer band of bright oxide-greRn, with margin of bright yellow and center wedge of creamy-white. The whole covered with blotches and spots of bright carmine and deep ma> oon. Price, 6 cents each; 40 cents per dozen; $3 per hundred. New Coleus, Beckwith's Gem—The leaves are large, of heavy tex- ture and with finely scalloped edges. It is the finest bright colored bed- der yet offered. The center is of the darkest velvety-maroon, bordered by a fiery-red, the edge is green at the base, changing to cream-yellow at the point of the leaf, marked and spotted with fine red and maroon. Price, 6 cents each; 40 cents per dozen; $3 per hundred. t COLEUS, ROO TED CUTT1NGS-A choice assortment of the best ? kinds. Strong plants put up in not less than ten of one variety. ? Price, 75 cts. per hundred; $3 per five hundred; $ per thousand. New Hardy Pink, HER MAJESTY. It is far ahead of anything yet seen, and all old white varieties sink into insignificance by the side*of this great beauty. It has become one of the most "popular of the day," and is largely grown by acres to supply the demand (which must come) for cut flowers. Price, field clumps, $1 per dozen. LITTLE GEM, FEVERFEW. This is a grand improvement on the old dwarf Feverfew. It is very dwarf, attaining a height of only eight or ten inches. The flowers are large, of a more perfect form, and of t


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggilbertnurserya, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890