. Annual & hardy perennial plants. Nurseries (Horticulture) Pennsylvania Chester County; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Pernnials Seeds Catalogs. species, with narrow, lanceolate leaves, and pale, whitish flowers; two feet high. P. Digitalis. A valuable tall-growing species from the Southern States. Large, showy, white, bell-shaped flowers. P. graiidllloius. A native western species, smooth and glaucous, thickish ovate or roundish leaves, and long racemes of showy, purplish-lilac flowers. P. ovatus. From Oregon, British Columbia, Ac. Plant puberulent, leaves broad, flowers not crowded—pale pink o


. Annual & hardy perennial plants. Nurseries (Horticulture) Pennsylvania Chester County; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Pernnials Seeds Catalogs. species, with narrow, lanceolate leaves, and pale, whitish flowers; two feet high. P. Digitalis. A valuable tall-growing species from the Southern States. Large, showy, white, bell-shaped flowers. P. graiidllloius. A native western species, smooth and glaucous, thickish ovate or roundish leaves, and long racemes of showy, purplish-lilac flowers. P. ovatus. From Oregon, British Columbia, Ac. Plant puberulent, leaves broad, flowers not crowded—pale pink or lilac. P. procerus. (Creeping Pentstemon.) This rare, dwarf species, comes from the Rocky mountains, forming carpet-like masses of dark- green leaves, and small purple flowers. [Pentstemon Digitalis.] P. pubescens. Our well-known pubescent species, growing two or three feet high, with nu- merous pale lilac or white flowers. P. spectabilis. Mountains of California and Oregon, growing three to four feet high, with pur- plish-blue flowers in spikes two feet long. Prairie Clover. 25cts. each. A native genus of leguminous plants from the west. Growth upright and slender, with spikes or heads of small flowers. Prefer sandy soil. P. candidum. (White Prairie Clover.) Blooms the latter part of summer; pure white flowers. P. « :oi > m bos urn. A southern species, producing a cluster of erect, very leafy stems, two feet high. Flowers white in autumn. PHLOX. 25 cts. each. North American plants, chiefly perennials, of easy cultivation. Stems branchless, one to four feet high, excepting the prostrate species; flowers in panicles. P. diraricata. A northern species, spreading, from nine to eighteen inches high, with a loose cyme of pale, lilac flowers, in May and June. P. maculata hybrlda. These are the florists' varieties, and are among the choicest decorative plauts for garden culture. The newer forms embrace a wide range of color, and are noted for the large size of


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookyear1876