42 



Qjrri<? Bros/ j-lortieultural Quide.- 



BALSA3I APPLE. 



BALSAM APPLE. 



(Moiuorclica.) 



Curioua trailing vines, with ornamental 

 foliage and odd-shaped fruit, which when ripe 

 open, showing a brilliant red interior ; make 

 a nice display on trellis and rock work. H. 

 H. A. 10 feet. 



Momordica Balsamina— (Balsaru Apple).. ..5 

 Momordica Charatina (Balsam Pear) 5 



CALENDULA. 



(Cape Marigold.) 



Attractive and free-blooming plants, doing 

 well in almost any situation. The Pot Mari- 

 gold, C. Pongei, is much prized as a pot plant. 

 H. A. 

 Officinalis Le Proust -Uniformly double; 



nankeen, edged with brown 5 



Officinalis Heteor— A variety very fine for 



pot culture, hearing light yellow flowers, 



striped with bright orange. Per oz. 20c. 5 calceolaria. 



Pluvialis- Single; Pure white, 1 foot. Per oz. 15 cts ° 



Pongei.fl.pl. (Pot Marigold)— Doable white. Per oz. 15 cts 5 



Prince of Orange —An improvement on Meteor. The color i9 a deeper shade 



of orange and striped in the same way. Per oz. 25 cts 5 



C ANNA— Indian Shot. 



Beautiful large-leaved foliage plants, suitable for forming groups oi lawns 

 or for the center of mixed flower beds. Many of the varieties are very beauti- 

 ful, both in foliage and flower. H. H. P. 

 Finest mixed -Per oz., 25 cts 5 



Large Flowering- French Cannas. 



In this new class of Cannas we have something of pronounced merit for 

 bedding. They make especially handsome centers for large beds, or back ribbons 

 for borders; a9 winter flowering plants in pots they are also of great value. The 

 foliage is luxuriant and the plants are dwarf in habit. The flowers are of im- 

 mense size and of very brilliant colore, ranging through all shades of yellow to 

 the richest crimson, scarlet and vermilion. Many are beautifully spotted. Seed 

 sown in a hotbed or greenhouse early in the season, can be had in flower ,by end 

 of July. 

 Crozy's Finest Mixed Colors 15 



BEGONIA. 



Plants well worthy of the admiration they receive. For decorative purposes they are 

 unexcelled. They are alike at home in the parlor or conservatory, bearing with great patience 

 almost any treatment. The tuberous-rooted varieties have beautiful flowers, many of the 

 single flowers measuring from 6 to 9 inches in circumference. T. P. 



Choice Mixed Single — Tuberous rooted ; from prize varieties 25 



Choice Mixed Double — Tuberous rooted ; from prize varieties 35 



Choice Rex Varieties— Large leaved sorts, mixed 25 



CACALIA- Tassel Flower. 



Pretty, free-flowering annuals, with tassel-shaped flowers, known by some as Flora's 

 Paint Brush. H. A. 

 nixed^ colors 5 



CALAMPELIS— Eccremocarpus. 



A beautiful climber with pretty foliage and bearing profusely bright orange tube-shaped 

 flowers produced in clusters. It attains a height of ten feet in a season. H. A. 

 Scaber 5 



CALCEOLARIA. 



Splendid plants for greenhouse decoration, forming in spring dense masses of pocket- 

 shaped flowers. Sow in September. T. P. 

 Hybrida Superba— Saved from the finest formed and most beautifully marked varieties 25 



CENTROSEMA GRANDI- 

 FLOKA. 



The Butterfly Pea. 



A new perfectly hardy vine of rare beauty, 

 which blooms the first season from seed 

 sown in April, producing in the greatest pro- 

 fusion large clusters of delightfully fragrant 

 inverted pea-shaped flowers, l>i to '2y 2 inches 

 in diameter, ranging in color from rosy-violet 

 to reddish purple, feathered white. The 

 buds and back of flowers are pure white, 

 making a striking contrast 10 



CALLIRHOE. 



Dwarf, free-blooming plants, continuing in 

 flower throughout the summer and fall. The 

 flowers are purplish with white center. H. A. 

 lnvolucrata— Large purplish, crimson flowers ; 



native of the western prairies 5 



Pedata— Crimson puiple, with white eye, 1 



foot 5 



-<i% 



CALENDULA— PRINCE OF ORANGE. 



OUR STRAIN OF CALCEOLARIA IS WITHOUT A RIVAL. 



