. The Charles A. Reeser Innisfallen Greenhouses. Nurseries (Horticulture) Ohio Urbana Catalogs; Plants, Ornamental Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Roses Catalogs. Innifallen Greenhouses, Urbana, Ohio. 47. NEW TROPAEOLUM GOLD-GARNET. Tropaeolum Lobblanuni. As easily grown as the common tall Nas- turtium, which it far surpasses in the re- markable brilliancy of its flowers. Few flowers bloom more profusely or possess such intense vivid and rich colors as the Tropa?olum Lobbian- um. They make beau- tiful hedges grown on brush, as are Sweet Peas, while they can also be


. The Charles A. Reeser Innisfallen Greenhouses. Nurseries (Horticulture) Ohio Urbana Catalogs; Plants, Ornamental Catalogs; Flowers Seeds Catalogs; Vegetables Seeds Catalogs; Roses Catalogs. Innifallen Greenhouses, Urbana, Ohio. 47. NEW TROPAEOLUM GOLD-GARNET. Tropaeolum Lobblanuni. As easily grown as the common tall Nas- turtium, which it far surpasses in the re- markable brilliancy of its flowers. Few flowers bloom more profusely or possess such intense vivid and rich colors as the Tropa?olum Lobbian- um. They make beau- tiful hedges grown on brush, as are Sweet Peas, while they can also be trailed to a greater height. In vases they are particu- larly attractive, hang- ing over, while grown simply trailing on the ground they are surpassingly beauti- ful, and furnish an abundance of bloom for house decoration in vases or bowls. Tropaeolum Gold-Gar- net. Superb flow- ers of shining yellow, richly marbled with garnet; very distinct. Per pkt. 10 cents. Tropaeolum Lucifer. The richest velvety deep crimson imaginable. Per pkt. 0 cents. Tropaeolum Spitfire. New, entirely true from seed; the brightest and most glowing in tone of all. Per pkt. C cents. Tropaeolum Finest Mixed. From dark velvety to the brightest gay col- ors in mixture. Per pkt 3 cents ; per oz. 25 cents. Tropaolum Dwarf. (See Nasturtium, page 42.) SEEDS OF PERENNIAL FLOWERS. In the following list we describe Biennials and Perennials which live in the garden over winter, and flower in the spring and summer of the fol- lowing year. While they do not reward the planter so quickly as do An- nuals, yet they are well worth waiting for—as they embrace some of our most beautiful flowers—and many of them, with scarcely any care, con- tinue to give a fine display of bloom year after year. Alyssum (Gold Dust). Saxatile, small, golden-yellow flowers. 3 cents. Aquilegia (Columbines). Very handsome, hardy plants, growing one to three feet high, of easy cultivation, and bearing in profusion large flow- ers of novel


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookyear1895