Dahlia, Double. 
Everyone knows and admires the Double Dahlia, but com- 
paratively few are aware that it can be grown so easily from 
seed, and flowers so beautifully the first season that the 
purchase of bulbs is a needless expense. Choice mixed, 
Pkt., 50 seeds, 5 cts. 
Dahlia, New Striped Single. 
The extra large single flowers, quite four inches in diam- 
eter, comprise a wonderful variety of colors, beautifully 
striped, flaked, mottled and dotted in a grotesque and 
charming manner. Pkt., 40 seeds, 3 cts. 
Pure white, Pkt., 30 seeds, 6 cts. 
Datura Cornucopia, "Horn of Plenty.” 
Discovered in South America by a collector of prchids. The plant is of 
robust habit, with thick, dark brown-purple, shining stems The branches 
are numerous, spreading three or four feet; thick, large, dark green col- 
ored leaves. The flowers are trumpet-shaped, measuring eight or ten 
inches in length and five to seven inches across the mouth, and form 
three distinct flowers growing each within the other. The mouth of corolla 
is a most delicate white, beautifully marbled with royal purple. A single 
plant gives from 200 to 300 fragrant blooms during the season, followed by 
a large thorny seed vessel, which adds to its beauty; is of the easiest 
culture; plant at the end of May in a warm, rich soil; can be cultivated as 
an isolated specimen, in masses, for centers of beds, or to fill barren 
places, and produces a striking effect. Pkt., 15 seeds, 4 cts. 
Datura, or Trumpet Flower, Mixed. 
Darge branching plants, producing handsome double and single trum- 
pet-shaped blossoms, white, blue, yellow and lilac, of exquisite fragrance. 
The blossoms open during the night, remaining open one day, and then 
perish. They bloom freely from seed sown in the open ground the first 
season, and the roots can be taken up and kept over winter. Pkt., 20 
seeds, 3 cts. , 
Mrs. L. M. Greeley, North Sutton, N. H., September 15, 1902, writes:— My Petunias from seed I 
had of you last spring are tho handsomest I ever saw. They arc the large-flowered kind and are 
admired by all who see them. I am very much pleased with them and shall take up all 1 can 
■pare room for and have them blossom in the house. 
