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 92 



EVERYTHING FOR TIE 



DIGITALIS or FOXGLOVE (G F L L o x « ED) 



and p e r S oXf fTe^spfkel 6 ! 'oYfeTnX ' ^ Pla ^ the l ^ ^ to &™ 

 roon etc TW a ~ autiful throat markings, spots and blotches of purple ma 



M ixed Colors. (Gloxinoides. j \ R ° Se ' Sp ° tted J^- 



Collection of above 4 separate sorts .' ™ 



Mo a nstrosa a ' ^1°^ Charmin g /owers of soft chrome'-yel'low.';.';.'. foe' 



^1S^"Sit"S3ci«;T~.'. b *"- ,, "''" ibl °"^a« 



DIMORPHOTHECA or African Daisy 



- ■ 



ESCHSCHOLTZIA or California Poppies 



Eschscholtzias are amon^ o„r mr .=f k_,.. ;( .., ._, . z" 11 / 1 ' U PP 1 ^i 



ut 1 foot high, 

 some 



New Hybrid Dimorphothecas or Van 

 colored African Daisies. Every 

 visitor to our grounds this summer 

 was struck by the brightness, 

 brilliancy and rich diversity of 

 colors of these new hybrids In 

 growth and flower these new 

 hybrids are like the parent, 

 but they vary in color from 

 white to red and tints of 

 sulphur lemon and golden- 

 yellow, orange, reddish- 

 yellow-salmon shades- 

 many are marked with' 

 different colored zones 

 (See cut.) Pkt. 10c. 



Dimorphotheca s i n u a t a . 



Equally beautiful, useful, 

 and of the same easy cul- 

 ture as the original Di- 

 morphotheca, this new 

 South- African species pro- 

 duces singularly pretty 

 flowers, 2y 2 inches across, 

 of a clear, satiny chamois 

 with a bluish disk; the re- 

 verse of the petals is pur- 

 phsh-red. This rare coloring 

 is distinct and not found 

 among the hybrids. The plants 

 form branched bushes, 12 to 

 15 inches high and are covered 

 with numerous flowers from 

 early summer till frost. . Pkt 15c 



We deliver Free in U. S. 



cul^ure SCh pTom S sp a ring a -rw n n g sTedsThey^ower^^^ W^^T** ^ * t! 

 them invaluable for bidding. The plants are nf £ U /f\ Untl U at \ ln J he autu ™. '^ , ' ; "~ 

 Golden West. Flowers of immense ,;„ ti of dwarf ' branching habit, about 1 foe 

 with orange blotches (S™ecut) colors. are intense and shining yellow: 



P^Tcrim^ 

 _ rich golden within Habit of plant bush v ,7 t0 ^ e br i Ulan - t coloring— orange-red outride! 



sea; K&r^bffoflEI? 1 ^^- 3 ™"- • about - 1 "-.^ PkL it 



carmfn; W6nng Van6tieS - Bdght crimson ' ^ri°r sating 

 Dainty 'Queen,' ' Rowers '•'creamy'-biush 'tinted' cofal-pink' 

 deepening m shade toward the edges . Pkt 10c' 



Erecta Compacta Mandarin. The plants'/of upright' 

 compact, bushy form, produce freely large flow- 

 ers of rich, deep orange color, shaded crimson. 



Pkt 10c" 

 Californica, Double, Mixed. White, yel- 

 low and orange pki 5 C 



Californica, Single, Mixed. ' Orange! 

 white, yellow, etc Pkt. 5c.' 



Bush Eschscholtzia 



(Hunnemannia fumariaefolia ) 

 Grows into a bush 2 feet high, 

 with the beautiful foliage of 

 the Escholtzia enlarged. Large 

 cup-shaped flowers, 3 inches 

 across, on stems 12 inches 

 long; the color is of clear 

 bright yellow, contrasting 

 vividly with the bunch of 

 golden stamens in the cen- 

 ter pkt. 10c. 



Golden Bartonia 



Bartonia aurea. Is a na- 

 tive of California, and one 

 of our showiest annuals. It 

 produces large single gold- 

 en-yellow flowers which have 

 quite a metallic lustre when 

 the sun shines on them. A 

 large cluster of vellow sta- 

 mens adds to the effectiveness 

 of the blossoms, which measure 

 nearly 3 inches across, and are 

 borne profusely all summer long, 

 on bushy plants about 1 foot high. 

 t succeeds best grown in masses 

 the foliage will shelter the ground 

 n the hot sun. It will then thrive 

 st anywhere, but prefers a moist 

 situation pkt. 10c. 



/by Parcel Post. Express) \/ d „_ I , , r-, situation Pkt . 1Q C . 



U r Freigh , « our Bption j Vegetable and Flower Sk^J **■*■. ~4 Also Uwn Grass Sgeds 



