Archive image from page 79 of Descriptive and illustrated catalogue and. Descriptive and illustrated catalogue and manual / Royal Palm Nurseries . descriptiveillus1893roya Year: 1892 74 Reasoner Bros., Oneco, Florida. dioica. Switch Sorkel. Related to Sapindus; a viscous shrub from Australia. 75 cents each. ECHITES. Vines, related closely to Nerium and Allamanda. Free flowering during their grow- ing season. Evergreen, tropical. E. Andrewsii. Matacomba and Key Largo Leaves rich, glossy green, wax-like. Flowers richest golden yellow, resembling the closely related Allamanda, only sm


Archive image from page 79 of Descriptive and illustrated catalogue and. Descriptive and illustrated catalogue and manual / Royal Palm Nurseries . descriptiveillus1893roya Year: 1892 74 Reasoner Bros., Oneco, Florida. dioica. Switch Sorkel. Related to Sapindus; a viscous shrub from Australia. 75 cents each. ECHITES. Vines, related closely to Nerium and Allamanda. Free flowering during their grow- ing season. Evergreen, tropical. E. Andrewsii. Matacomba and Key Largo Leaves rich, glossy green, wax-like. Flowers richest golden yellow, resembling the closely related Allamanda, only smaller. |1 each. E. palndosa. Salt marshes of the lower coast. Flowers white, tinged with the most delicate pink. $1 each. EHRETIA serrata. Heliotrope Tkee. Quite hardy in this latitude. Reaches fair size. Bhotan, Nepaul, Bengal, and other parts of India. Flowers odorous, with a honey-like smell. Drupes red, the size of a pea; said to be edible. 35 cents to 11 each. EBANTHEMUM nervosum (Dadalacanthus nervosus, Eranthemum pulcheUum). A beautiful winter and spring-blooming plant, pi-oducing a pro- fusion of deep blue flowers. Welladapted for open-air culture in South Florida. 15 cts. each. ERIOLiENA Candolli. Mountains of Prome, on the banks of the Irrawaddi. Flowers yellow. Tree forty feet in height. |1 each. ERYTHEINA. 'The Erythrinas (Bois Immor- telles, as they call them here), their all but leafless boughs, now blazing against the blue sky with vermilion flowers, trees of red coral sixty feet in height.'—Kingsley. 'Another here and there, which was a mass of glowing crimson, gleaming like sheets of flame upon the mountain sides.'—C. T. Simpson. We have discarded all the exotic species formerly grown, as they succumbed to the worm peculiar to this genus of plants. It eats out the pith of the stem, and is not noticed until the plant is too far gone for recovery. E. herbacea. Our native species, here frequently forming a large tree afoot or more in diameter. Should be more g


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