^ GRIFFITH ®, TURNER CO >^ 53 



PETUNIAS. 



RELIABLE 



Favorite, half- 

 I hardy, succeed- 

 ing well in any 

 rich soil. For 

 the brilliancy 

 and variety of 

 the colors, and 

 the Ions duration 

 of their blooming 

 period, they are 

 indispensable in 

 any garden. Sow 

 seed early in 

 spring, scatter 

 thinly on an even surface, and barely cover 

 the seed with sand. If intended for the open 

 ground, prick out into a frame to be kept till 

 planting-out time. If for pots, pot singly into 

 small pots in strong rich soil mixed with sand, 

 and shift as the plants grow larger. 



FINE MIXED — Good mixture of small free- 

 hlooming colors. Packet, 5c. 



166. SINCXiE-PBINGED MIXED PETUNIA 

 — L.arge flowers, four to five inches across, of 

 €very hue, each flower being beautifully 

 fringed. Packet, 25c. 



167. DOUBIiE PETUNIA — About 30 per 

 cent, will produce double flowers. Packet, 25c. 



168. PETUNIA — Double-Pringed Mixed — 

 The flowers of this sort being double, together 

 with being fringed, are very beautiful. 

 Packet 25c. 



175. ' PHLOX DBUMMONDII (A) — A most 

 brilliant and beautiful hardy annual, about 1 

 foot high, well adapted for bedding, making a 

 dazzling show through the whole season. It 

 succeeds well on almost any soil. Packet, 5c. 



176. PHIiOX DBUMMONDII — (Nana Com- 

 pacta) (A) — -Very fine mixed. This new strain 

 is of dwarf, compact habit, and makes desir- 

 able pot plants; 



also excellent 

 for ribbon lines 

 and m a s s i n 

 Jacket, 10c. 



RICINUS (Castor Bean). 



FLOWER SEEDS 



Ten 5c. Papers Mailed for 25c., or Four 10c. Papers for 25c. 



PINKS— (DIANTHUS) . 



Seed may be sown in the open ground in spring after danger of frost is 

 past in the place where the plants are wanted to bloom. Use well-pulverized 

 soil, preferably sandy loam. Make the rows one foot to 15 inches apart, and 

 cover the seed with one-fourth inch of fine soil, firmly pressed down. When 

 Z inches high, thin 6 to S inches apart. 



180. PINK CABNATION, or FICOTEE. (Choicest Double Mixed Dianthus 

 Caryophylus) — ('arnation and Picotee Pinks are generally favorites for their 

 delicious fragrance, richness of colors and profuse bloom. Perennial. Pkt., 10c. 



181. PINK CABNATION (Biviera Market, or Gillaud) — A magnificent va- 

 riety of colors and shades, which will thrive either in open ground or pots. 



182. ' PINK CABNATION— MABGUEBITE— These lovely, fragrant Carna- 

 tions produce fine double flowers. From seed sown in the garden early in 

 the spring, the plants begin to bloom in about four months. All colors mixed. 

 The finest strain. Per Packet, 10c. 



185. PINK — (CHINA OB INDIAN PINK)— Blooms in clusters, flowers 

 very doulile and bloom in a large range of bright colors. Packet, 5c. 



188. PINK — HEDDEWIGH (P) — Beautiful double flowers in a great vari- 

 ety of colors, with fringed white edges. Packet, 5c. 



200. POPPy-CARNATION (Pa- 

 paver) (A)— A showy and easily 

 cultivated hardy annual, with 

 large brilliant colored flowers, 

 growing freely in any garden 

 soil. Packet, 5c. 



201. POPPY— PEONY nOW- 

 EBED (A) — A magnificent spe- 

 cies, large, showy, double globule 

 flowers, resembling Peonies in . 

 shape. Packet, 5c. 



202. SHIBZiEY POPPY (A) — | 

 These beautiful Poppies are gen- 

 erally single or semi-double. The 

 colors, extending from one ex- 

 treme to the other, are so varied 

 that scarcely two are alike, while 

 many are striped and blotched. 

 The blooms, if cut when young, 

 will stand for two or three days. 

 Packet, 5c. 



203. TUtIP POPPY (A)— A 

 magnificent species. The plants 

 attain a height of 14 to 16 inches, 

 and produce from about 50 to 60 

 flowers of the brightest scarlet. 

 Packet, 5c. 



204. ICEI^AND POPPIES, MIXED (A) — Although hardy perennials, 

 these Poppies bloom the first season from spring-sown seed. The 

 fragrant, elegant, crushed satin-like flowers are produced in never- 

 ceasing succession from the beginning of June to October. Packet, 5c. 



205. POPPY — IBBESISTIBZ.E (A) — A rare and beautiful Poppy, 

 with immense flowers. Color, an exquisite rose. Packet, 5c. 



195. POBTUIACA (Mexican Bose) (A) — One of the finest hardy an- 

 nual plants, of easy culture, thriving best in rather rich, light loam or 

 sandy soil; the single-flowering varieties are large and brilliant, of the 

 richest shades of color, and produced throughout the summer in great 

 profusion; flne for massing in beds or edgings of rock work. Pkt., 5c. 



196. DOUBZ.E FCBTUI.ACA (A)— Packet, 10c. 



210. ENGZiISH PBIMBOSE (Primula Vulg'aris) (P) — No collection 

 of spring flowers is complete without a few of these charming little 

 plants. A little covering in the late fall will protect them from the 

 severe weather of winter, and the great number of flowers produced 

 will more than repay you the extra trouble. They are not as generally 

 grown as they should be. Packet, 10c. 



211. CHINESE PBIMBOSE (Primula Pringed) (A) — This variety is 

 much prettier than the English, being fringed and of the most beautiful 

 colors. They differ from each other like the double and single Petunias. 

 Packet, 25c. 



BICINUS (Castor rean). 



Stately, strong-growing plants, with very ornamental foliage, well 

 adapted as center plants of groups of Cannas, Dahlias, etc. Moles are 

 troublesome in many gardens, but they may be kept away by planting 

 Castor Beans in the borders. 



212. BICINUS, CAMBOGIENSIS (A)— Large leaves, dark bronzy- 

 maroon; stalk and stems nearly black; 5 feet. Packet, 5c. 



2121^. BICINUS ZANZIBABIENSIS, MIXED (A) — Their immense 

 leaves and gigantic plants exceed all other varieties. Packet, 5c. 



213. SCABIOSA — GBANDIFI^ORA (P) — An old-fashioned but most 

 attractive flower. Us great abundance and long succession of richly 

 colored, fragrant blossoms on long stems make it one of the most 

 useful decorative plants of the garden. Seed may be sown in place as 

 soon as ground can be worked; or, for earlier blooming, sow in hotbed 

 early in spring and transplant one and one-half feet apart. Hardy an-= 

 nual; 12 to IS inches high. Packet, 10c. 



TULIP POPPY. 



Alili PBICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. 



