. Annual & hardy perennial plants. Nurseries (Horticulture) Pennsylvania Chester County; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Pernnials Seeds Catalogs. 22 HOOPES, KRO. & THOMAS* CATALOGUE OK E. coronopifolium. A southern species, growing from two to four feet high, pubescent, with white flowers, blooming in September and October. Found in dry, sandy soil. E. cuneifolium. Another pretty southern plant, from two to three feet high, with obovate-oblong, pubescent, pale glaucous leaves, and white flow- ers. Blooms in September. E. foeniculaceum. A noble species, from three to ten feet in height- smooth


. Annual & hardy perennial plants. Nurseries (Horticulture) Pennsylvania Chester County; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Pernnials Seeds Catalogs. 22 HOOPES, KRO. & THOMAS* CATALOGUE OK E. coronopifolium. A southern species, growing from two to four feet high, pubescent, with white flowers, blooming in September and October. Found in dry, sandy soil. E. cuneifolium. Another pretty southern plant, from two to three feet high, with obovate-oblong, pubescent, pale glaucous leaves, and white flow- ers. Blooms in September. E. foeniculaceum. A noble species, from three to ten feet in height- smooth or nearly so, with white flowers, in bloom during September and Oc- tober. Found from Virginia to Florida. E. li> ssopifolium. From one to two or three feet high, minutely pu- bescent, leaves lanceolate or linear, and white flowers. Found from Massa- chusetts to Florida. Blooms in September. E. rotundifolium. About two feet high, downy-pubescent, mostly sim- ple, ovate or roundish leaves, and large corymbs of white flowers in August. From Rhode Island to Florida—in dry soil. E. teucrifolium. A roughish, pubescent species, growing from two to three feet high, with ovate, coarsely serrate leaves, and white flowers. Damp soil; from Massachusetts to [Ferula communis.] FERULA. Fennel. each. Umbelliferous plants from the Mediterranean, &c, with tall stems, deeply divided leaves, and large, compound umbels. Ordinary soil. F. communis. (Common Giant Fennel.) A tine, showy plant for sub-tropical gardening, growing from six to ten, and even fifteen feet in height, with beautiful fern-like, deeply divided foliage. FRAGARIA. Strawberky. 35 cts. each. Running perennials with white flowers, cultivated mainly for the edible, fleshy recepta- cle or 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 perfectly resemble the original w


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookyear1876