. Spring 1900. Nursery stock Ohio Painesville Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Flowers Catalogs; Bulbs (Plants) Catalogs; Plants, Ornamental Catalogs; Fruit trees Seedlings Catalogs; Fruit Catalogs. ENDIVE. Green Curled. Is the hardiest variety, blanches white. Pkt. 5c. oz. 15c. %rb. 40c. White Curled. Leaves pale green, mid-rib yellow. Pkt. 5c, oz. 15c, Khb. 40c. HORSE RADISH, Sets, doz. 25c, 100 for 80c. KOHL RABI. Early White Vienna. Dwarf, small, early; bulb hand- some, firm, glossy white; leaves few and small and slender stems; the best variety for table, but should be used when young
. Spring 1900. Nursery stock Ohio Painesville Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Flowers Catalogs; Bulbs (Plants) Catalogs; Plants, Ornamental Catalogs; Fruit trees Seedlings Catalogs; Fruit Catalogs. ENDIVE. Green Curled. Is the hardiest variety, blanches white. Pkt. 5c. oz. 15c. %rb. 40c. White Curled. Leaves pale green, mid-rib yellow. Pkt. 5c, oz. 15c, Khb. 40c. HORSE RADISH, Sets, doz. 25c, 100 for 80c. KOHL RABI. Early White Vienna. Dwarf, small, early; bulb hand- some, firm, glossy white; leaves few and small and slender stems; the best variety for table, but should be used when young and not larger than an early turnip. All varieties are tough and stringy when overgrown. Pkt. 5c, oz. 20c, J41b. 60c KALE OR BORECOLE. Dwarf Green Curled. The Kales are more hardy than cabbage; make excellent greens for winter and spring use; are improved by frost. For winter sow from May to June and cultivate the same as cab- bage. For spring sow in September and protect during the winter. Pkt. 5c, oz. 10c, /41b. KALE. LEEK. London Flag. Sow early in the spring in drills one- inch deep and one foot apart. When six or eight inches high transplant in rows ten inches apart each way, as deep as possible that the neck may be blanched. One oz. to 150 feet drilled. Pkt. 5c, oz. 10c, 541b. 30c. LETTUCE. For early spring use sow in September and protect through the winter in cold frames the same as cab- bages, or sow in hot beds in March and transplant to open ground as soon as it can be worked. For late supplies sow in the open ground as soon as the season will permit, in rows one foot apart; thin out plants one foot apart in rows. If sown every two or three weeks to the middle of August, it may be had in perfection the entire season. One oz. will sow 125 feet of drill and produce Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not per
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