. Book on summer gardening. Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Fruit Seeds Catalogs; Grasses Seeds Catalogs; Gardening Equipment and supplies Catalogs; Commercial catalogs New York (State) Binghamton. £afa!o|ue of I^afe ]?\o\jOef §eeds. 41 ridge egg; this pod turns black in ripening and when open discloses three large, glistening, ebony black seeds. With cool weather the foliage changes its color to scarlet and golden, and at this time the plant is particularly beautiful vilh its rich colored leaves, white flowers, bright green cap- sules and glistening black seeds. In cold cli


. Book on summer gardening. Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Fruit Seeds Catalogs; Grasses Seeds Catalogs; Gardening Equipment and supplies Catalogs; Commercial catalogs New York (State) Binghamton. £afa!o|ue of I^afe ]?\o\jOef §eeds. 41 ridge egg; this pod turns black in ripening and when open discloses three large, glistening, ebony black seeds. With cool weather the foliage changes its color to scarlet and golden, and at this time the plant is particularly beautiful vilh its rich colored leaves, white flowers, bright green cap- sules and glistening black seeds. In cold climates the plant can be cut back and taken up and wintered in a cellar, to be planted the following spring. Plants can be propagated by culling. Seeds, per packet, 10 cents. 3013. —"Heavenly Blue.'' The foliage is very large, heart-shaped; flowers 4 to 5 inches across in large clusters and of that indescribable light blue with a yellow throat suf- fusing softly into blue. This climber is so compactly covered with bloom as tc almost cover the foliage. It is also a splen- did conservatory climber 15 THE BRAZILIAN MORNING GLORY (Ipomcea Setosa)--C. 386.—This is one of the most magnificent summer climbing annuals. It grows with the greatest vigor and luxuriance- Seed sown in May produced plants that covered a trellis 12 feet high by July 2Sth, and by August 15th the vines were from 30 to 40 feet long and still growing, brandling and climbing in all directions. The leaves are from 8 to 12 inches across, and are borne from the ground up, overlapping each other and making a dense shade. Every part of the vine is thickly coverd with short reddisV hairs, which, with its im- mense leaves and large clusters of curious seed capsules, Tender it highly ornamental, and give it quite a tropical ap- pearance. We know of nothing so good for quickly covering a piazza, arbor or tree, and where a dense shade is required it has no equal. The flowers, which open in the morning, are three in


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookyear1895