. Childs rare flowers, vegetables, and fruits. Fruit Varieties United States Catalogs; Flowers Varieties United States Catalogs; Vegetables Varieties United States Catalogs; John Lewis Childs (Firm); Fruit; Flowers; Vegetables. JOHN LEWIS CHILDS. FLORAL PARK. QUEENS N. Y. Ornamental ^l-imbers. Every garden, every cottage, every fence, wall, Stump, t>r old tree is beautified by the graceful and profuse Ootvering vines here offered. Vines are nature's tlraperies and are essential to uity and every attempt to beautify one's home smwHHn^lt Hcatitiful, beautiful vines, many an unsightly obj


. Childs rare flowers, vegetables, and fruits. Fruit Varieties United States Catalogs; Flowers Varieties United States Catalogs; Vegetables Varieties United States Catalogs; John Lewis Childs (Firm); Fruit; Flowers; Vegetables. JOHN LEWIS CHILDS. FLORAL PARK. QUEENS N. Y. Ornamental ^l-imbers. Every garden, every cottage, every fence, wall, Stump, t>r old tree is beautified by the graceful and profuse Ootvering vines here offered. Vines are nature's tlraperies and are essential to uity and every attempt to beautify one's home smwHHn^lt Hcatitiful, beautiful vines, many an unsightly object do thev covei, many a lovely screen, or fence, or trellis, do they make, masses of ht-autiful blossom-, and grateful shade do they furnish. The following selection is all that can be desired among annual climbers. Our Sweet Peas, Mornjng Glories and Nasturtiums are particularly fine. (lamuy Bird plow'ci*. A dainty vine, with beautiful cut-leaves and pretty, delicate flower* of a clear canary yellow . From the color of its blossoms, and also from a fancied r« semblance of their shape to a bird with wing- expanded, the plant obtains it- common name. A prett> cine fur the window or for a shel- tered location out of doors. Per pkt. Tropaeolum Canarien6is, or Canary Hird Flower r, ' I69». (7cr>troscrna Grandiflora. This new vine has come to stay. It is easy to grow, quick to bloom, beautiful in flower and leaf, and is a hardy p ren- niaL lasting for years. It will flower the first season from seed, and autumn frosts find it still in bloom. It is a low. graceful Climber, growing only six to eight feet high, which makes it far more suitable for a low trellis or lattice work, or to train around a door or window in summer, than a taller, larger-leaved vine would be, and its masses of large, inverted, pea-shaped blossoms, two inches or more across, and borne in clusters of four to eight flowers together, arc- very showy and pleasing. Fill a small vase with its dai


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectflowers, bookyear1896