. Spring 1900. Nursery stock Ohio Painesville Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Flowers Catalogs; Bulbs (Plants) Catalogs; Plants, Ornamental Catalogs; Fruit trees Seedlings Catalogs; Fruit Catalogs. Priscella. Good-s i z e d lowers, with nicely quilled petals; yellow, tipped bright scarlet. 20c. Pluton. Clear canary yel- low. 20c. Ruth. Pure white; dwarf grower. Rev. C. W. Bolton. Large flowers; sal- mon buff, spotted deep crimson. 20c. Wm. Agnew. Flowers of largest size and perfect form; intense dazzling red. One of the finest for cut flowers. 20c. Snowdrift. A fine free blooming pure whi


. Spring 1900. Nursery stock Ohio Painesville Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Flowers Catalogs; Bulbs (Plants) Catalogs; Plants, Ornamental Catalogs; Fruit trees Seedlings Catalogs; Fruit Catalogs. Priscella. Good-s i z e d lowers, with nicely quilled petals; yellow, tipped bright scarlet. 20c. Pluton. Clear canary yel- low. 20c. Ruth. Pure white; dwarf grower. Rev. C. W. Bolton. Large flowers; sal- mon buff, spotted deep crimson. 20c. Wm. Agnew. Flowers of largest size and perfect form; intense dazzling red. One of the finest for cut flowers. 20c. Snowdrift. A fine free blooming pure white. Unless noted, 15c. each; 8 for $ SINGLE DAHLIAS. This class is remarkably free in bloom; flowers on long, graceful stems; preferred by many to the more formal double varieties as a cut flower. Harold. Dark velvety maroon, nearly black. Sandusky. Orange, large size, very distinct. White Queen. Large pure white. Yellow Gem. Deep yellow. 15 cents each. CACTUS A very showy and effective section of the Dahlia family. Especially fine for cut flowers. Constance. Pure white; fine shaped flowers and one of the freest blooming. Cochineal. Dazzling crimson scarlet. The flowers are produced in the grandest profusion. DAHLIAS. Clifford W. Bruton. Extra large flowering; pure yel- low; one of the very best of its class. Flowers are 4 to 5 inches in diameter and always beautiful. 20c. Glare of the Garden. A grand variety of the loose flowered or flat petaled type; by far the most brilliant scarlet of any Dahlia we cultivate. Henry Patrick. Pure white: very free flowering. Lady Marshall. Orange scarlet, shaded carmine. Mrs. Barry. Purple with crimson shadings. Mrs. Peart. A very distinct variety with beautiful quilled petals, pure white. 25c. Mrs. Hawkins. Rich sulphur, shading off to the tips of the petals with light canary yellow. A beau- tiful variety. Mrs. G. Reed. Flowers pure white, conspicuously edged with rosy lake. The petals are deeply cleft. giving it a peculiar fr


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