64 



CURRIE BROTHERS COMPANY, MILWAUKEE, WIS. 



BALSAM— LADY'S SLIPPER 



Old favorites which have been greatly improved, both in size of 

 flower and variety of color. Grown in good garden soil they form 

 nice, bushy plants, -which are perfectly covered with flowers. Our 

 strains of these are unsurpassed for size of blooms, doubleness and 

 beauty of colors. 



Pkt. 



Double Camellia Flowered- 

 Double Camellia Flowered- 

 Double Lilac 



Double Red 



-White, extra choice 



-Finest Mixed. % oz. 25c 



5 Double Peaeh Blossom. . . 



5 Double White 



Double Solferino — Beautifully striped scarlet and lilac on white 



ground 



Double Mixed — Per Yi oz. 20c; oz. 60c 



10 

 5 



5 

 5 



5 

 5 



BEGONIA HYBRIDA FL. PL. PENDTJLA. 



Collection of 6 Separate Colors 2 



BEGONIA. 



Plants well worthy the admiration they receive. They are alike 

 at home in the parlor or conservatory, bearing almost any treat- 

 ment. T. P. 



Pkt. 

 Hybrida Fl. PI. Pendula (Novelty) — (Slew Double Drooping 

 Begonia) — A splendid tuberous-rooted Begonia, the branches 

 of which are drooping like the Ivy-leaved Geranium, and are 

 covered with strangely formed, loose, double flowers in light 

 and dark-rose, salmon, carmine and bright red shades. This 

 is a very quick grower, forming shoots 16 to 20 inches long 



the first year. (See illustration) 20 



Erfordia — Rose Pink 15 



Gracilis Luminosa — Bright Scarlet ■ 15 



Both of the above are wonderful bedders. fully the peers of 

 Geraniums and Coleus, doing equally well in full sunlight or 

 shade. 



Vernon — An excellent variety for bedding 10 



Choice Mixed Single (Tuberous Rooted) — From prize varieties. 20 

 Choice Mixed Double (Tuberous Rooted) — From prize varieties. 25 

 Choice Rex Varieties — Large leaved sorts, mixed. . 25 



BRACHYCOME. 



Pkt. 

 Iberidifolia (Swan River Daisy) — A very pretty dwarf- 

 growing plant, covered all summer with a profusion of 

 blue and white Cineraria-like blossoms, iy> feet. H. 

 H. A T 5 



BROWALLIA. 



Elata Coerulea — Large, skv-blue flowers with a white 

 center, 1 y 2 feet. H. H. A 5 



Speciosa Major — A very profuse blooming plant growing 

 freely In rich soil. The blooms are large, of a rare 

 ultramarine blue color. Excellent for hanging baskets, 

 and especially valuable as a pot plant for winter and 

 spring flowering 10 



BRYONOPSIS. 



I.aciniosa — A beautiful climber, bearing green fruits which 

 change, as the season advances, to bright scarlet, striped 

 with white. 10 feet. H. H. A 



CACALIA — Tassel Flower. 



Pretty free-flowering annuals, with tassel-shaped flowers, 

 known by some as Flora's Paint Brush. H. A. Mixed 

 colors 



CALA.MPELIS — Bugle Vine. 



Scabra — A beautiful climber with pretty foliage and bear- 

 ing profusely bright orange tube-shaped flowers, pro- 

 duced in clusters. It attains a height of 10 feet in a 

 season. H. A 



Pkt. 



CALENDULA — Cape Marigold. 



Showy, free-flowering hardy annuals, growing in any good garden soil, 

 producing a fine effect in beds or mixed borders, and continuing in bloom 

 until killed by frost; valuable also for pot culture, blooming freely in winter 

 and early spring. 1 foot. 



Pkt. 

 Officinalis Le Proust — Double; nankeen, edged with brown 5 



Officinalis Meteor — Fine for pot culture, bearing yellow flowers striped 

 with bright orange; per oz. 25c 5 



Orange King — Dark orange, flowers large and very double; oz. 30c 5 



Pluvialis, Single — Pure white, 1 foot; per oz. 20c '. . . 5 



Pongei, 11. pi. (Pot Marigold) — Double white; per oz. 20c 5 



Prince of Orange — An improvement on Meteor. Color a deeper shade and 

 striped in the same way; per oz. 25c 5 



Pure Gold — Golden yellow, flowers extra large and double; oz. 30c 5 



CALCEOLARIA. 



Splendid plants for greenhouse decorations, forming in spring dense 

 masses of pocket-shaped flowers. Sow in September. T. P. 



Pkt. 

 Hybrida Superba — Saved by one of England's famous specialists. Monster 

 flowers of rich and varied colors, including spotted, laced, blotched and 

 self-colored varieties 25 



CALCEOLARIA 



