12 



The Florists^ Review 



UA.X 5, 1921 



MR. FLORIST!! 



Plant Bodger's Seeds and they 

 wiU "Sayjt with Flowers" 



We have been working for several years 



perfedting ^ocks and we are now able to 



assift you in giving the flower-buying public 



what they are calHngj^for: the beautiful 



pa^el shades of delicate pinks, tyrian rose, 



fiery cerise and an endless lift of pleasing 



shades in a New Type of immense size and 



unusual petalage, the Dahlia*^ Flowered 



Zinnia. This type is popularizing the Zinnia . 



We have also introduced in Giants the 



Picotee, the Vidtory Quilled and a rich 



Golden Yellow called "Buttercup." These 



are diftindtive and attractive as cut flowers. 



We ^ have also on the market the long- 



ftemmed Beauty Type of After and next 



year will have an Early Flowering After 



in this type for you. 



We also recommend our Seleded Strains 



of Cregos and American Branching, our 



Fancy Strains of Half Dwarf Cineraria, Calendula, Candytuft, the New Double Cosmos,'White, Pink and Crimson; 



Giant Zinnia in fifteen diftindt shades, and many other reseledted ftrains for florifts. 



We are grotvetM and Melt only in bulk, bat all reliable aeedamen carry — 



BODGER'S FLORISTS' STOCKS-BUY TODAY FROM YOUR NEAREST SEEDSMAN 



Golden Yellow Sweet Peas! 



McClenahan's Yellow Flower Dye 



Willquickly and uniformly dye white, light-pink and rose-pink peas to golden 



yellow, apricot and burnt orange respectively 



For two years I have supplied dyed peas to the Oklahoma City market, and they are now more popular than 

 ever. The peas take the dye perfectly. It never streaks, but diifuses through the petals so the veins are 

 not distinguishable, and thejdyed flowers appear so natural that many people search seed catalogues and 

 make diligent inquiry for seed of these new colors. 



;ntral tuft uncolored, 



ftcile Brunners quickly 



White Carnations take the dye to a medium yellow, sometimes leaving part of the.^ 

 but producing a charming effect. :;• 



So far as we have experimented, roses seem to take the dye as readily as peas do. Q 

 change to orange. ,• 



See What a User Says : 



"We liave been liandling Sweet Peas from you for the last two .years, and have always been more ihan pleased 

 with the yellow, apricot, ami the burnt orange, which you have colored with McClenahan's Yellow P'lower Dye. 

 The colors have a' ways been cl^ar and real, never showing streaks as we have noticed in other dyes. W*" know the 

 dye to be agreit suiH'ess,"— THR FOSTER FLORA.L CO., Oklahoma City, Okla., April 10. l;i2i. 



This dye keeps indefinitely in dry form, dissolves instantly, and we use same solution for one to two weeks. 

 PRICE, sufficient to make one quart, $1.00, prepaid. Six for $5.00. 



H. S. McCLENAHAN 



40th and Phillips Streets 



OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA. 



