MISS MARY E. MARTIN, FLORAL PARK, NEW YORK. 



CALLIOPSIS, 



Cioldeu ji'llow \\i 

 Pkt.,200seeds, 3o. 



CALLIOPSIS. Orows without trouble. Blooms oy hun- 

 —^Hir^^ dreds. A lovely flower. Shiicles of 



crimson and l;rowii. Pkt., '200 seeds, 3c. 

 New Double. Handsome double sort. 

 le maroon zone. 



CALLIOPSIS. "California 

 Sunbeams." Hardy. These love- 

 ly improved varieties are mucli larger 

 than any lieielol'ore offered, and have 

 the great recommendation ol being 

 eailij blooming; tlie flowers are beauti- 

 fully formed" with very lonj.' stems; 

 s<mae saucer-shaped, others flat, some 

 Cosmos flowcied, some exquisitely in- 

 curved, while others are like great 

 bultcrcu])s. The petals are y)road, 

 with pinked, toothed or irregularly 

 fringed edges. Some are very light 

 yellow, otheis a deeper shade, darker 

 around the eye— all so fine, it is diffi- 

 cult to say \vhi(4i i3 most beautiful. 

 They are 3 to 4 inches in diam- 

 eter, rkt., 100 seeds, 6c. 



CALLIOPSIS LANCEOLATA 

 GRANDIFLORA. "Golden 

 Glory." A hardy sort blooming 

 from seed the first year. Very large 

 golden \ellow fiowers, of great ele- 

 gaiH'eand beauty. Tlie plant is cov- 

 ered with flowers the entire summer. 

 One of our most artistic fiowers. 

 Pkt, 100 seeds, 5c. 



ESCHOLTZIA— CALIFORNIA POPPY. (California'n 



mi^mmmmmi^mmm^^^^^m^^mmmm^^^^^^^i^m^ Goldon 



Glory.) These produce a wealth of beauty— a carpet of gold, unsur- 

 passed by any flower grown. A flow er w hose grace is beyond criticism, 

 I whose beauty is unsuri)assed. Produced in bounteous profusion. A 

 I spray of the«e is the artist's ideal. What a ])icture the\ make. For 

 I beds and edgings they are a ma<^s of flowers all summer. The ground 

 is covered with the fern-like foliage, overlaid with these golden tulip 

 poppies. Pkt., 250 seeds, 5c. 



NEW ESCHOLTZIA "THE GOLDEN WEST.' 



The 



flow- 

 ers of this grand new variety measure from 3 to 6 inches in diameter, 

 they have very large, overlapping petals, often daintily waved at the 

 edges. They are of various forms, some flat, some cup-shaped, 

 others very deep with flaring edges. They are of a light canary -yellow 

 color with an orange blotch at the base of the petals, which blotch 

 often suffuses almost the whole flower. They are decidedly beautiful. 

 Price, pkt., 6c ; 3 pkts. for 15c. 



GIANT YELLOW TULIP POPPY. 



( Hunnemannia 

 Fumariaefolia.) 



In our trial grounds the past two seasons this was one of tlie showiest 



and most satisfactory plants, in over four hundred trials. Seed sown #»i«iit vri i n\u tiii id dabbv 



early inMay, and by the middle of July the plants are covered with biniiT vt-LLUW lubir ruKfT. 



their large buttercup-yellow poppy-like blossoms, and they were never out of flower until hard frost. The plants grow 

 about 2 feet high, are quite bushy, with beautiful feathery glaucous foliage. Pkt., 100 seeds, 6c. 



