72 
CARTERS TESTED SEEDS— BEAUTIFUL FLOIVERS. 
HELIOTROPE] 
HELIOTROPE (Chekky Pie).— S weet-scented perennials, 
nncler glass ill early spring, and pot off. 
No. 
4325 Carters Larg;c-flowered Varieties.— Beautiful novelties; 
good colours. 
4326 Anna Turrell.— Light. Ht. 2 ft. 
4327 Roi des Noirs.— Dark. Ht. 2 ft. 
4328 White Lady. 
4329 Mixed. — Ordinary varieties. 
HEUCH ERA.— Perennial. Charming for bouquets. Sow in spring, 
and plant out. 
[JACOB'S LADDER 
H O LLY HOC K — Continued. 
No. 
431)1 Carters Perpetual-flowering. — Annual Type— S own 
early 111 spring and planted out first week in May, it will bloom 
from middle of July to late in autumn. Habit brandling semi 
tall, flowers double with graceful loose petals. Mixed colours. 
4303 Choice Mammoth Fringed Varieties.— Mixed colours. 
4304 Single hybrids in the most delicate shades and pure colours 
fhe plants are very robust and remain in bloom over a long 
period. 
The following are packed in 6d. 1/- and 1/6 packets. 
Sow 
4332 Splendens.— Crimson. Ht. lft ft. 
4333 Splendens alba.— White. 
HIBISCUS (Mallow Tribe). — S howy annual and perennial. Sow 
African ns, the annual species, in early spring under glass, 
and plant out when all fear of frost has gone. Coccinens should 
be sown in heat, and potted off and grown in warm house. 
4336 African us.— Annual. Creamy-yellow, purple markings. Ht. 
4337 Cocci neus.— Scarlet greenhouse shrub; used for decoration 
of walls. Ht. 6 ft. 
HOLLYHOCK. where plants have suffered from rust 
m previous years, seedlings should be 
sprayed with Bordeaux mixture early in spring, and again when 
the flower spikes are forming. Seed is usually sown in summer, 
and the plants grown on to flower next season, but some prefer 
to sow in boxes or on a hot-bed early in the year. Prick the 
young plants out. and plant out in April to bloom the same 
summer. 
CARTERS DOUBLE SHOW. 
4290 Carters Crimson. 
4291 Carters Purplish-Violet. 
4292 Carters Rose. 
4293 Carters Salmon. 
4294 Carters Sulphur- 
Yellow. 
4295 Carters Pure White. 
4298 Carters Choice Mixed. 
HONESTY (Lunaria). Hardy biennial. Singular seed vessels; 
useful, when dried, for house decoration in winter. Sow in 
spring. 
4342 Purple. 
4343 White.— Ht. lft ft. 
4344 NOVELTY.— Munstead Purple. —This giant form of 
Lunaria was raised by Miss Jekyll, V.M.H., in her delightful 
wild garden at Munstead Wood. The large well-formed flowers 
are of great substance and quite distinct, being a bright rosy 
purple. For growing in the semi-wild garden and for spring 
bedding it is a most brilliant subject, supplying a colour which 
is rare in the early part of the year. 
HONEYSUCKLE, Japanese.— Perennial. 
4352 Variegrato. — Evergreen. Fine in window boxes and hanging 
baskets. 
HOP. See Humulus. 
HUMEA.— Biennial. For greenhouse, in pots. It also makes a 
graceful plant when used in beds during summer. Sow in 
summer in pots, in cool frame or greenhouse, and pot off. 
4355 Elegans. 
HUMULUS (Hop).— H ardy climbers. No. 4348 is a very pretty 
quick-growing annual climber. Sow in pots early in February’ 
in heat, and plant out in May. 
4347 Japonicus.— Green foliage. 
4348 Japonicus variegratus.— Green foliage, marked silvery 
white. 
4349 Lupulus. — Perennial (Garden Hop). 
IBERIS. See Candytuft. 
ICE PLANT.— Annual. 
4361 Mesembryanthemum crystallinum. 
IMPATIENS (Balsam). — Annual. Sow in spring in heat, and pot 
off. Perpetual bloomers. 
4364 Sultani. — Rosy scarlet. 
4365 Holsti ( Zanzibar Balsam).— A new annual plant from East 
Africa, resembling the Zanzibar Balsam in habit, leaf, and shape 
of blossom. Colour vermilion red. A beautiful plant for half- 
shady places and pots. Awarded a First-Class Certificate. 
R.H.S. 
INCARVILLEA.— Perennial. Beautiful Gloxinia-like flowers. Sow 
m spring under glass, and pot off. Makes an effective plant in 
a warm border, as its plants are produced on long stems. 
4368 Delavayi.— Flowers lovely crimson-purple, with yellow veined 
throat. 
INDIAN CORN. See Zea. 
INDIAN CRESS. See Nasturtium. 
INDIAN HEMP. See Cannabis. 
INDIAN PINK (Dianthus Cminensis).— B iennial. 
4374 Carters Double Mixed. 
4375 Mixed Singie. — Ordinary. 
INDIAN SHOT. See Canna. 
IONOPSIDIUM.— Annual. Sow in spring or autumn in open 
ground. 
4378 Acaule.— Pale lilac. For pots, edgings, or rockwork. 
IPO MAE A. See Convolvulus. 
IRIS (Fleur de I.is).— H ardy bulb. 
4381 Mixed. — All sorts. 
4382 Ksempferi. — Japanese varieties. 
ISOLEPIS. Sec Ornamental Grasses. 
4302 Double Palling; Belle.— This particularly fine form bears 
large double flowers of a charming shade of silvery pink and 
attracts much attention. A splendid subject for clumping at 
tne back of herbaceous borders. Per pkt., 1/6 and 2/6 
Countryside.— With the same attractive 
habit of growth as Palling Belle. Flowers 
of a charming crimson colour. 
Per pkt., 1/6 and 2/6 
JACOBS. — Hardy annuals. Sow in open border in spring. 
4385 Carters Mixed.— For pots or borders. 
4386 Crimson. 
4387 Purple. 
JACOB’S LADDER (Polemonium Cucruleum).— Hardy perennial. 
Sow in spring, and plant out. 
4390 Blue.— One of the oldest recorded British plants. Ht. 1 ft. 
NEW. 
The above are packed ir 
'(paXTiXd Seedsmen to H.M. the Kins 
6d. 1/- and 1/6 packets. 
RA YXES PA RK, LON DOS, S. W. ig. 
