NEW FLOWERS F 
New Giant Double Picotee Zinnias 
A very pretty novelty. The flowers are just as large 
as the Giants and intensely double, appearing in all 
shades found among Zinnias, but with the lower end 
of each petal distinctly tipped with maroon, pink, and 
many other well-defined color-markings, giving the 
flower a verj^ attractive and pleasing appearance. 
Pkt. 35 cts. 
Adonis Aleppica, Syrian Flos Adonis 
Adonis Aleppica 
Syrian Flos Adonis 
It is astonishing that this most beautiful annual, 
described by Boissier and indigenous between Aleppo 
and Aintab, has not long ago been introduced into our 
gardens. It is indeed mentioned only in a few botanical 
works. It is a really fine annual of permanent value 
and may be put in line with the best we possess. A 
great acquisition for groups, beds, or borders, and can 
also be used as a pot-plant. The plants grow 16 to 
20 inches high and produce from sixteen to twenty 
main stems. From these many lateral branches are 
sent off, each ending in a round, eight-petaled flower, 
measuring 3 inches in diameter, or four times as large 
as a common Flos Adonis. The color is a sliining, deep, 
dark blood-red of greatest brilliancy. The flowers 
appear in great numbers and the effect of the free- 
blooming, pyramidal-growing plant is enhanced by its 
very handsome feathery foliage. Cut blooms put in 
water keep fresh for over two weeks. Pkt. 75 cts. 
Schling's New Hybrid Double 
Poppy Illustrated on front cover 
As big as a peony. Beautifully fringed and gor- 
geously colored, appearing mostly in pink shades, with 
many of the finely cut petals beautifully tinted and 
penciled, but what is really most wonderful about our 
new Hybrids is the great substance of the flowers, for 
ihey last a full week in water., when cut, while other 
Poppies ustially drop their petals the second day. 
Pkt. 25 cts., 5 pkts. 
New Siberian Hardy Wallflower 
This exquisite new variety fills the long-felt want for 
a really hardy Wallflower. It will survive our severest 
winters and is a plant of great beauty, with its gorgeous 
orange flowers and shining dark green foliage. The 
plants grow about 15 inches high, branch freely and 
bloom the whole season. If sown in the hotbed or green- 
house in March, plants will bloom the first year. 
Pkt. 50 cts. 
I wish you could see how wonderfully your seeds have come 
up in my rock garden. It vays all around to buy and sell the 
best. — Charles J. Bayne, Macon, Ga. 
% 19 21, continued 
Schling's Annual Star 
Chrysanthemums 
Magnificent single Chrysanthemums like huge daisies, 
on stems 18 inches long. WonderftU flowers for cvitting. 
As easily grown from seed as a zinnia. A flower you 
must have in your garden. 
MORNING STAR. Soft primrose-yellow; 18-inch 
stems. Pkt. 25 cts. 
EVENING STAR. Deep golden yellow. Pkt. 25 cts. 
WHITE STAR. Ivory-white, bronze center. Pkt. 
15 cts. 
Collection — One pkt. of each of the above 3 varieties, 
55 cts. 
New Swan River Daisy, Little 
Blue Star 
A fine bushy plant, when in full bloom completelj' 
covered with lovely blue cineraria-like flowers on stems 
10 inches long. Pkt. 50 cts. 
A Miniature Daisy, Celestial 
Queen 
An exceedingly free-flowering and very pretty blue 
Marguerite with tiny blossoms of a celestial or sky- 
blue color on slender stems, lovely in vases, bowls, and 
baskets. Plants grow about 1 foot high and bloom 
freely all siunmer; can also be grown in pots; a flower 
you will enjoy greatly. Pkt. 50 cts. 
Fringed Moonpenny Daisy 
{Chrysanthemum maximum laciniatum) 
A beautiful white perennial Marguerite with plume- 
shaped laciniated petals on long stems; , superb for 
cutting. Pkt. 50 cts. 
Clerodendron Fallax 
Splendid pot plants with flower heads resembling 
a hydrangea. Seeds sown in March will produce 
flowering plants in November. Pkt. $1. 
24 WEST 59th STREET, NEW YORK 
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