BELAIR MARKET AND HILLEN STREET, BALTIMORE, MD. 



27 



ETERNAL FLOWER.-(Helichrysum). 



(a) These are very popular and desirable for Winter 

 decorations, bouquets, wreaths, etc. They should be cut 

 when they come into full bloom, tied into bunches and 

 dried in the shade with their heads downward. 



BRACTECTUM — Double mixed. Packet, 5c. 



BRACTECTUM.—Double red. Packet, 5c 

 FEVERFEW.— Golden Feather.— (Pyrethum Aureum.) 



(pi) A highly ornamental golden yellow foliage plant, 

 unexcelled for bedding; one and a half feet. Packet, 5c. 

 FORGET-ME-NOT.-(Myosotis). 



Neat and beautiful little plants with star-iike flowers, 

 succeeding best in a shady, moist situation; half-hardy pe- 

 rennials; blooming the first year from seed if sown early. 

 Packet, sc. 



FOX CLOVE.-(Digitalis). 



A handsome and highly ornamental hardy perennial 

 plant of stately growth, fine for shrubberies and other half- 

 shady places; three feet. Packet, 5c. 



CILIA, MIXED. 



(a) Very pretty dwarf plants, early, free blooming; fine 

 for massing and rock work; one foot. Packet, 5c. 



HELIOTROPE. 



These are deliciously fragrant flowers, remaining in 

 bloom a long time; fine for pot culture or bedding; one and 

 a half foot. Half-hardy annuals. Packet, 5c. 



HESPERIS. (See Sweet Rocket.) 



HOLLYHOCK, MIXED. 



(Althea Rosea.) 



This is one of the oldest inhab- 

 itants of our gardens, and now 

 ranks as one of the finest Autumn 

 flowers. Packet, Sc. 



DOUBLE WHITE Largely 



used by florists. Packet, 10c. 

 JOSEPH'S COAT. 

 (See Amaranthus Tricolor.) 



LARKSPUR (Delphinum).— 

 One of the most showy and useful 

 plants, possessing nearly all requi- 

 sites for adornment of the garden. 



DWARF ROCKET Double 



extra fine, mixed. Packet, 5c. 



LOBELIA. 



(a) A beautiful and popular flower, very desirable for 

 pot culture, beds or hanging baskets, because of its trailing 

 habits. Grows easily and does well in beds and rockeries. 

 Bears a profusion of blue and white flowers. 



ERINUS — Mixed trailer. Package, 5c. 



CRYSTAL BLUE.— Package, 5c. 



LUPINS-(Lupinus). 

 ■ Large showy plants for beds and borders. Should be 

 sown where they are to bloom, as they do not transplant 

 well. Flowers in long, graceful spikes of rich and varied 

 colors. Large rose. Packet. 5c. 



MARICOLD.-(Tagetis) 



These are very showy bloomers, and are quite favor- 

 ites. Very effective for groups and masses. African 

 double tall mixed. French double tall mixed, French 

 double dwarf mixed. Packet, 5c. 



MARVEL OF PERU, OR 4 O'CLOCK. 



(Marabilis). 

 Handsome, free-flowering, sweet-scented. Blossoms va- 

 riegated, striped and various colors, blooming in profusion, 

 simultaneously about 4 o'clock in the afternoon. Perennial. 

 Fine mixed. Variegated leaved, mixed. Packet, 5c. 



MIGNONETTE. 



(a) Called by some, "Frenchman's 

 Darling." The well-known sweet-scent- 

 ed flowers so valuable for bouquets. 

 Sweet-scented. 5c. per package. 



DWARF MORNINGCLORIES 



(a) A beautiful plant of trailing 

 habit, growing twelve inches high. 

 Thev make a fine border. 



STRIPED — White, striped with 

 blue; pretty. 



TRI-COLOR ROSEUS Rose 



colored, with white centre. 



MIXED — Many bright colors. 

 Per oz., ioc. 



MIGNONETTE. 



HOLLYHOCK. 



MESEMBRYANTHEMUM. 

 TRI-COLOR (Dew Plant).— (a) Pink, with purple 

 centre; dwarf spreading plants of great beauty, blooming 

 the entire Summer, succeeding best in dry, sandy or loamy 

 soil, and in warm locality. It belongs to the half-hardy 

 annuals. 



NASTURTIUM. (Tropaeolum) 



(a) One of the most satisfac- 

 tory flowers in the whole list to 

 grow, for they will thrive in any 

 situation and in any kind of soil; 

 in fact, the poorer the soil, the 

 more profusely will they bloom, 

 as rich soil tends to increase the 

 growth of the foliage rather than 

 that of the flowers. Great im- 

 provement has been made of late 

 in the size and color of the flow- 

 ers. They run the entire gamut 

 of colors, from white to black, 

 and some of the combinations 

 are most beautiful. One great ad- 

 NASTURTIUM. vantage they have is that the oft- 



ener the flowers are plucked the more profusely will they 



bloom. Packet, 5c. 



TALL NASTURTIUM. (See Climbers.) 

 TALL MORNING GLORIES. (See Climbers.) 



NICOTIANA AFFINIS. 



A handsome genus of garden 

 plants of the Tobacco family, 

 which are noted for the free- 

 dom and fragrance of their 

 bloom. Half-hardy annuals, 

 three feet high. Flowers white, 

 salver - shaped, having long, 

 tubular corollas, and are of ex- 

 quisite fragrance. Deserves a 

 place in every garden. Pack- 

 age, ioc. 



MOONFLOWER. 



(See Climbers.) 



NICOTIANA AFFINIS. 



PAEONIA. 



(Sinensis, or Chinese 

 Paeony.) 

 (pi) For large size, 

 , r zr\ fi ne colors and pro- 

 % -W,^ \, fuse blooming, this 

 ' variety ranks above 

 all others. They are 

 perfectly hardy, and 

 bear transplanting 

 better than most any 

 other plant. They 

 will live through the 

 coldest Winters, and 

 in any kind of ground 

 will make magnifi- 

 cent masses of bloom 

 in early Summer. 5c. 

 PAEONIA. per package. 



PHLOX, DRUMMONDH. 



LARGE-FLOWERING, OR 

 GRANDIFLORA VARIETIES. 



(a) A bed of Phlox (the name 

 means flame) is indeed a most 

 beautiful sight, and they are so 

 easy of cultivation that no garden 

 should be without them. Either 

 massed in beds or as single plants 

 they are equally desirable, and by 

 occasional sowing a succession of 

 bloom may be had until frost. 

 They like a rich, loamy soil, and 

 plenty of water. Seed should be 

 sown in the open ground early in 

 the Spring, or in the Fall late 

 enough to insure their not sprout- 

 ing until Spring, as the plants will not stand frost. Fine 

 mixed varieties; all colors. Packet, sc. 



FIMBRIATA AND CUSPIDATA Mixed. Pkt., 5c. 



PHLOX. 



EIGHT LARGE 5c PACKAGES FLOWER SEEDS, 25c. 



