COoo M^W YpRgi 



105 



in 



newhooldet 

 "Hendersons, 

 plowersforAmeri' 

 can Gardens". 



Sent free on rC' 

 quest. 



DIGITALIS or Foxglove 



(Gloxinia-Flowered) 



These improved Foxglo\ es are very showy, hardy 

 I plants; they are easy to grow and produce freely 

 I spikes 4 to 5 feet high, well furnished with large, 

 I Gloxinia-like flowers of various colors, including 

 1 white, cream, rose, red and other shades, all of 

 ' which have beautiful throat markings, spots and 

 i blotches of purple, inaroon, etc. They are more 

 ' robust than the ordinary garden Digitalis, have 

 stouter stems and larger flowers. 



2163 Purple, Sponed PM. 10c. 



; 9163 Rose, Spotted 10c. 



1 S164 White, Spotted 10c. 



I SlSe Grandiflora, Yellow. Charming flowers of soft chrome-yellow 10c. 



>tl70 Mixed Colors. (Gloxinoides.) Per IfiOQ seeds. Z^c; Pkt., 10c. 



I 1180 MOWSTROSA. A very unique and beautiful type, producing long spikea 



of large flowers of various colors, many of which are beautifully spotted, 



etc., but the striking feature of this strain is the enormous bell shaped 



blossom that tops each spike of flowers. 



Mixed Colors Per 1,000 seeds, 50c.; Pkt., 15c 



DOLICHOS or Hyacinth Bean 



Annual climbers, of rapid growth, 10 feet high, with Wistaria-like clusters 

 of flowers, followed by bronzy-purple seed pods. 

 I S192 Japanese Giant Crimson. Blush, deepening with age to dark red. 



Pkt 10c. 

 1 tl93 Japanese Giant White. Long spikes of clear white flowers lOc 



ESCHSCHOLTZIAS or California Poppy 



Er;chscholtzias are among our most beautiful and popular annuals, being 

 of the easiest culture. From spring-sown seed they flower profusely until 

 late in the autumn, inaking them invaluable for bedding. The plants are 

 ' dwarf-branching habit, about 1 foot high. (See engraving.) 

 t882 Eschscholtzia, Wew Hybrid. .. These recently introduced novelties 

 represent a great advance in the evolution of these popular flowers. 

 The plant of new type is very erect and bears extra large flowers of 

 tints and shaded never before seen in Eschscholtzias. They include 

 soft pink, scarlet, chrome yellow, coppery red, shades of claret, and 

 royal purole, and extra rich shades of crimson, pink and orange scar- 

 let .' Per 1.000 seeds, 50c. Pkt. ISc, 



1314 Crimson King. The best of the red-flowering varieties. Bright 



crimson, interior satiny carmine ; Pkt. 10c. 



iai6_ Dainty Queen. Flowers creamy blush tinted coral-pink, deepening 



in shade toward the edges Pkt. 10c. 



1220 Califomica, Double Mixed. White, yellow and orange Pkt. 10c. 



2223 Golden West. Flowers of immense size. The colors are intense and 

 shining yellows, some with orange blotches. 



Per 1,000 seeds, 25c.; PR 10c. 



8224 Erecta Compacta Mandarin. The plants, of upright compact,, bushy 



form, produce freely large flowers of rich, deep, orange color, shaded 



crimson Pkt. 10c. 



: S226 Mikado. Large flowers of lustrous orange-crimson Pkt. 10c. 



S280 Califomica, Single, Mixed. Orange, white, yellow, etc. 



Per 1,000 seeds, 25c.; Pkt. 10c. 



ESCHSCHOLTZIA-BUSH 



Hunnemannia FumariaefoUa 

 S2I2 Grows into a bush 2 feet high. Large, cup shaped flowers, 3 inches across, on long 

 the color is bright yellow, contrasting vividly with the bunch of golden stamens 

 center Per 1,000 seeds, 30c.; Pkt. 10c, 



DIMORPHOTHECA or African Daisy 



2185 Golden African Daisy. (D. Aurantiacpi.) Kn extremely showy annual oLneat branching| 

 habit;_ grows about 12 inches high, flowering during the summer in continuous profusion. 

 The single, Daisy-like blossoms, 2M inches indiameter, are brilliant orange, with a dark- 

 colored disk, zoned black; well adapted for groups or borders; it stands the heat finely and 

 produces its pretty flowers very early in sunny situations and will continueto flower during 

 the summer. (See engraving.) .". , ,_. . . .'. .• .... '.". . Per 500 seeds, 35ci; Pkt., 10c. 



2186 Hybrid African Daisies. In growth and- flower these n§w hybrids, are like the parent, but 

 theyvary in color from white to red and tints of sulphur lemon tad golden-yellow, orange, 

 reddish-yellow s^mon shades;, many are marked wilh^different colored zoiies. 



Pe?- 5*00 seeds, 40c.; "P7ef., 10c. 



EUPHORBIA MARGINATAlqr '^ gnow-on-the-Mountain" 



2235 This native annual is quite popular as a gardeii plant on account of its showy appearance 

 and ease of culture in almost any soil — even the pdOre^t — ^if -in a sjjnny location. It is of rank 

 branching growth, about 2 ft. high. _ The foliage of light green being broadly n{iargined with 

 silvery- white, giving the effect, in miniature of "Snow-on-the- Mountain." (See engraving.) 



Pkt. 10c. 



GAILLARDIA, Giant Hardy Hybrid 



2250 These are hardy perennials, compact in growth, and produce a succession of flowers summer 

 and fall. As cut flowers they last in water for days. The flowers are often 4 to 5 inches 

 across, colored in great diversity of variations and blendings, including such combinations 

 as scarlet with gold edge, blood-red with yellow edge, yellow with orange disk, golden with 

 scarlet border, pure yellow, fiei^ crimson, and many others. 

 Giant Hardy Hybrid, Mixed Colors Per 500 seeds, 50c. ; Pkt., 10c. 



GAILLARDIA, Annual Varieties 



Very showy garden annuals, 1 to 2 feet high. Grown in 

 masses they are especially effective; large flowers, 2 to 3 

 inches across, produced from early summer until frost; 

 unrivaled for cutting. 



22S5 Lorenziana, or Double-flowering. Large round heads, 

 composed of numerous fibrets of crimson, garnet, 



lemon, orange, etc Pkt. 10c. 



2260 Mixed S.ingle Varieties. .Per 500 seeds. 25c.; Pkt. 10c. 



AH seeds listed on this page are delivered transportation paid in the U. S. or possessions. ORDER EARLY. 



