• • T 
r-p.r*^ir.- 
Canneiis’ Floral Guide, 1904. 
Yeiisbnas. 
BEDDING VARIETIES. 
ALICE — Vnre white; fine flower; good habit. 
ALLEMANIA — Fine pink bedder, splendid 
habit ; very free flowering. 
ANNIE- Pink. 
BOTTLE DE NEIGE — One of the best 
white beddcrs ; nicely scented. 
CRIMSON KINO- — Bright crimson ; fine 
habit. Rooted cuttings, Ss. per 100. 
ELLEN WILMOTT — Pink, with white eye ; 
a grand variety. 9<f. each ; 6s. doz. 
ECLIPSE — Crimson ; a splendid bedder. 
LORD BROOKE — Deep scarlet, with distinct 
white eye. 
LOVELY 
LUSTROUS — Most intense scarlet, with large 
bold pure white eye ; a very strong grower, of a 
creeping habit. 
NEMESIS —Very deep pink. 
PRE-EMINENT — Pure pink, white eye. 
Rooted cuttings, 8s. per 100. 
PURPLE QUEEN — Deep purple ; good 
constitution. 
RISING SUN — Bright scarlet self ; com- 
pact flower. 
VENOSA — Hardy kind, and for long ribbon 
borders for back rows is one of the best colours ; 
manve-pnrple. 6d. each ; 6s. per doz. 
WARLEY— See Novelties in front of Cata- 
logue. 
ZULU — Rich claret. 
BLUE — Very light blue, very 
sweetly scented ; grand flower ; strong grower. 
Rooted cuttings. Is. per doz.; post free. Is. 4rf. : established in pots, 2s. Gd. per doz. 
Special price per 100 and 1,000 on application. 
Messrs. H. 0. & Sons carried ofi’ the only Medal for Verbenas ever given by the Royal 
Horticultural Society. 
V®S0NI'CAS. 
SHRUBBY VARIETIES.— General Collection. 
1 * VERY useful and ornamental group of small half-hardy evergreen shrubs, but in many 
places perfectly hardy, especially in the south of England and near the coast, forming into 
' luxiu-iant bushes, and ornamental both in foliage and flower. As pot plants they are useful 
the whole year, and in the autumn are amongst the prettiest of flowering shrubs ; planted out during 
the summer and lifted in the approach of frost they will produce flowers for a long time. 
1. ANDERSONI— Blue and white. Is. 
27. ANDERSONI VARIEGATA — For 
bedding. 
2. ADOLAR HERLL. 
3. BLUE OEM— Light blue 
6. CELESTIAL— Sky-blue. 
6. CREME ET VIOLET— Flesh-pink and 
mauve. 
7. DECUSSATA- Blue. 
9. FAUST— Dark blue. Is. 
10. OIRDWOODLANA— Light blue. 
All those not priced Gd. each 
11. HULKEANA — Creaniv pink. Is. 
12. IMPERATRICE— Rich blue. Is. 
14. LYALLI — Light blue. 
19. MINIATURE— Reddish violet. 
PURPLE QUEEN. 
REINE DES BLANCHES — PuTe 
white. 
22 . 
25. 
26. 
ROTUNDIFOLIA— Blue. Is. 
SALICIPOLIA— Light blue. Is. 
TRAVERSI— White. Gd. and Is. 
VULCAN. 
our selection, 6s. per doz. 
Vl^OLAS (Tufted Tansies). 
[ANY of these continue in bloom (even beneath the snow) all the winter ; and at the first 
IffC few days of sunshine they are a brilliant mass, and if planted in bands of colours like other 
ordinary bedding plants, in well-manured, deeply-dng soil, they give a glare of colour from 
February to July. We grow acres ; in the spring they are a grand sight. 
For full descriptions, see Floi-al Guide of 1902. 
ABBESS — Like Countess of Kintore. id. ARCHD. GRANT — Dark rosy purple. 
ACCUSHLA — White and rich purple. 
A. J. ROWBERRY— Yellow self. 
4d. 
ALEX RENTON — Rose, flaked crimson. 4d. 
ANNE — Pure white, rayiess. 
ARDWELL GEM— Yellow. 
BADEN-POWELL — Purple, striped purple 
and white. 
BEAUTY OF NORTON — Light purple. 
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