WM. HENRY MAULE, PHILADELPHIA, PA. 



Flower Seeds — 153 



STOKESIA 



Hardy Perennial 

 1744 CYANEA. Also called Corn- 

 flower Aster. Two feet high, bear- 

 ing lovely lavender blue blossoms, 

 resembling cornflowers. Blooms July 

 till frost. Valuable for cutting. 

 Flowers 4 inches across. No garden, 

 large or small, should be without it. 

 Culture easy. Packet, 10 cents. 



SUNFLOWER 



Hardy Annual 



Helianthus. See farm seeds for 

 the common types. The sunflowers 

 are of easy culture, and the newer 

 sorts are among the most ornamental 

 and efl'ectlve of all garden annuals. 

 1746 CHRYSANTHEMUM 

 FliOAVERED. Pine, perfectly 

 Stokesia Cyanea. double golden flowers, resembling 



Japanese chrysanthemums; 6 to 10 inches in diameter, height, 5 to 6 feet. 

 Packet, 10 cents; ounce, 25 cents; 'H ounces, 40 cents. 

 1747 STELLA. Height, 3 to 4 feet. Flowers star shaped, of brightest 

 golden yellow, with dark centres. They are borne on long stems, and 

 are suitable for cutting. Bloom continues from June until frost. 

 Packet, 5 cents; ounce, 25 cents; 2 ounces, 40 cents. 

 1745 CACTUS FI.OVVERED, STARLIGHT. A new single an- 

 nual sunflower, with flnely formed flowers, of graceful appearance, and 

 with petals beautifully twisted like those of a cactus dahlia. Flowers 

 are borne on long stems and are a decided canary yellow color. 4 feet. 

 Packet, 10 cts.; ^s, ounce, 15 ets.; J4 ounce, 25 cts.; ounce 75 cts. 



Sunflower, Starlight 



Sunflower, Perennial. 



Sunflower, Globe of Gold 

 AND Stella. 



Sunflower Chrysanthemum- 

 Flowered. 



7757 GLOBE OF GOLD. Dahlia Sunflower, Golden Quilled Sun- 

 flower. A double sunflower, attaining a height of but little over 3 feet. 

 Each branch carries a beautiful globe-shaped flower of richest golden 

 color. Packet, 10 cents; ounce, 30 cents; % pound, $1.00. 



1752 ORION. A new sort. Height 4 feet. Flowers 3 inches across, 

 of bright yellow color, somewhat resembling a single cactus dahlia 

 in shape. A highly ornamental sunflower. Packet, 5c.; ounce, 30c. 



1753 DWARF, PERKEO. This charming dwarf sunflower blooms 

 the whole season, in greatest profusion. It grows a foot high and 

 forms a bush about a 

 foot in diameter. The 

 long -stemmed flowers 



are 2 to S Inches across. _^ -wt^aa- - ^ 



They are bright yellow — ^-*=s^S^ rw^-^J8*i ^1 r ts^^^^m fil 



in color, with dark cen- ^Esstg-^q^^ Mj ~^^JWil^^'^Sr<k^\\ 



tres, and make pretty A~Vro^C^i^^S-"'^a^. J i -Hw-i TW^ii'.' 

 and durable cut flowers. 

 Pkt., 10c. ; % oz., 25c. 



Hardy Perennial 



Sunflower 



7754 PERENNIAL. 



A mixture of single 

 flowered perennial 

 sorts. Seed sown early 

 will produce flowering 

 plants the first year. 

 These are indispensable 

 in the hardy border. 



Packet, 10 cents. Dwarf Sunflower, Perkeo. 



Mrs. E. A. Hardy, TJrbana, Ohio.— We used your seed last year and think them 

 the best we ever used. Our garden was the earliest and best in the country, our 

 tiowers the prettiest. From Pansy seed planted in the open ground in early Spring, 

 we picked the last flowers December 3rd; your seeds cannot be beat. 



Mrs. A. J. Beam, Mt. "Washington, Missouri.— I have a most remarkable Pansy 

 bed from seed sown one year ago, they bloomed last season, then was slightly 

 mulched and this spring they are a glory, just one mass of bloom. 



Maule's Wild Flow^er Garden Mixture 



A Delightful Surprise to Tliousands of Flower Lovers for More Than Twenty-Five Years 



1909 Not a tame garden of wild flowers, but a wild garden of tame flow- 

 ers. A mixtureof the choicest seeds, mostly annuals, to be sown bap-haz- 

 ard, in a promiscuous way. The results are both surprising and charm- 

 ing. It savorsjust enough of chancf and guess-woYk to be interesting. For 



a number of years I have sent out this mixture, and have received many 

 testimonials of the pleasing results obtained. To guess the identity of 

 unknown plants in a flower bed, before they bloom, is like working a 

 puzzle. Unlike a lottery there are no blanks. Everything is a prize. 



Packet, 10 cents; ounce, 25 cents; quarter pound, 75 cents; pound, $2.50; 234 pounds. $5.00, postpaid. 



