EW... G LL Grandiflora 
HARDY Al A RD | ie Compacta. 
New compact-growing varieties, forming round bushes only 12 to 15 inches 
high, and bearing their long-stemmed blossoms upright. The flowers are large 
and the colors as rich and yaried as the old tall varieties. As the flowers are 
produced in continuity and abundance (the second year and afterward) from June 
until frost, this will be one 
of the most popular flower- 
ing plants for the hardy 
garden. Excellent for cut- 
ting. (See cut.)...... Pkt. 20 
NEW GERANIUMS. 
Californian Giant-Flowering Hybrids. A strain of 
seed saved from grand new hybrids all greatly enlarged 
and improved. The flowers are extra large, round, of 
the most perfect forms, borne on splendid trusses, some 
of them forming balls 16 inches in diameter. The colors 
are all shades 0! scarlet and crimson, rose, pink, salmon, 
cream veined pink, blush, snowy white, and all the new 
auriole types with lovely rings and large whiteeyes. These 
all stand the hot sun, and sown early they make good 
flowering plants the first summer. (See cut.)....Pkt. 25 
GLOXINIA COQUETTE. 
Hybrida grandiflora, ‘‘Coquette.’’ Beautiful large 
yellow-throated varieties—a color so uncommon in 
Gloxinias. The yellow feathers out over other colors, 
such as lavender, dark blue, pink, dark red, ete., giving 
a strikingly beautiful effect. (See cut.)............00+ Pkt. 25 
NEW HIBISCUS. 
Rose Pink, with White Base. Hardy garden plant, 
forming strong bushes about three feet high, with foliage 
distinct from other varieties. The large saucer-shaped CALIFORNIAN GIANT HYBRID GERANIUMS. 
flowers, three inches or more across, are of exquisite 
rose pink with a white base or centre. One of the finest of the ‘“‘marsh mallowS.”’..........::csssceseesereee Pkt. 15 
MATRICARIA—Snowball. 
Pure snow-white double flowers in dense clusters almost cover- 
ing the oval plants with bloom; height, eight inches. Flowers 
first season from seed. Very desirable for bedding, making fine 
contrast surrounded by blue Lobelia.............::cceseceeee eeeeee Pkt. 20 
SULPHUR 
NEW MARIGOLD. inibtr’ 
The third variety in this distinct class. Neat little plants, 
only fourto five inches high by six inches in diameter, 
that are covered with small but very double flowers 
of bright sulphur yellow. Fine for garden edgings, 
MASSES, OF [OT POS. <2. 22.4. -vcidiscsedecsset0-covesseccavent Pkt. 20 
NEW MIGNONETTES. 
“Bismarck.’’ A new German variety that the relia- 
ble grower claims to be the ‘‘climax of perfection.”’ 
He states the plants are ‘‘powerful’’ and have a 
‘‘solidness and vigor’” that casts all other garden 
varieties in the shade. The stout stems, unequaled 
by any other, élevate above the foliage the dense 
pyramidal spikes of bloom, which at the base are 
double the diameter of anysother kind. The color 
is reddish and the fragrance enchanting Woes Pkt, 25 
Mignonette, ‘‘Silvery Whité.” (Reseda odorata 
i$. grandiflora com- 
oh 4 pacta argentea.) 
( Recommended as 
the best white 
Mignonette 
hitherto known. 
It is of bushy, 
compact growth 
and produces a 
great number of 
silvery - white 
flower-spikes. 
Pkt. 20 
GAILLARDIA GRANDIFLORA COMPACTA, 
“japanese HOLLYHOCKS. 
e anes pt 
These unique and beautiful Hollyhocks, fromthe ‘| Fiowery 
Kingdom,” are great acquisitions. The plants grow in 
pyramidal form to a height of only 15 to 18:inches, and are 
covered from bottom to top with semi-double flowers about 
three inches across, the petals of Which are crinkled and © 
fringed like crumpled and slashed satin; the colors are” 
erimson, white. pink, pink shaded with deep pink toward 
centre of flower, and pink with a white edge. Mixed. ;) 
Goloxsiil (Seelantay erento PRE 25s 
KOSTELETZKIA VIRGINICA. 
A beautiful American plant of the Hibiscus family, pro- 
ducing numerous bright pink flowers about two inches 
across on branching stems. It is a perennial where it 
grows near the seashore protected during the winter ‘by 
withered cat-tails and reeds, but is highly satisfactory 
STOWD AS AN ANNUAL..............cecceeeeeceeesceceeereeese cere Pkt. 15 
Pp 
S= = 
DWARF JAPANESE HOLLYHOCK. 
Harty LOBELIAS. Fiowering. 
sw For permanent effects in the hardy garden, or for beds 
on the lawn, these tall perennial Lobelias are unrivaled; 
in bloom they stand about two feet high. They produce 
long spikes of flowers two inches across, orfully doublein size 
those of the older sorts. Whenin bloom, which is during the 
summer and autumn, the effect is gorgeous. (See cut.) 
“Rivoirei.”’ Giant-flowering pink....................0..26. Pkt. 50 
“Furst Bismarck.’”’ Brilliant crimson............0.0000 35 
NEW HARDY LUPINUS. 
Arboreus, “‘Snow Queen.’’ It forms dense bushes about four 
feet high, completely closed to the ground with elegant racemes 
of snowy white flowers during early summer; the vivid green back- 
ground of foliage adds an additional charm to the effect........... Pkt. 50 
Diffusus. Another highly satisfactory hardy variety, with masses of f 
flower trusses of light blue. Both sorts are fine for cut flowers..Pkt. 25 GIANT-FLOWERING HARDY LOBELIAS. 
GLOXINIA COQUETTE. 
We do not 
REMEMBER —Henderson’s Seeds; etc.,. are genuine Only When purchased fTOM US dTeCL, {ssosty seater 
