WE GROW PLANTS FOR THE SOUTHERN PLANTER 
17 
SINGLE GERANIUMS, continued 
Madonna. Soft pale pink ; florets large, 
arranged in handsome, showy trusses, well 
above the foliage; distinct and beautiful color. 
Queen of the West. Bright orange-scar- 
let; large trusses; a free bloomer. 
8lgnor Crisp!. Light pink, white eye; 
strong and free in growth and bloom. 
Souv.de Mlrande. Round florets, cream- 
white upper petals, with a distinct rosy pink 
border; lower petals salmon-rose, streaked 
with pure white. It is extremely free-flower- 
ing, and produces fine trusses. 
Triumphant. The best scarlet bedder yet 
introduced. 
DOUBLE GERANIUMS 
Alpine Beauty. Very dwarf, with stiff, 
neat foliage; the flower stems are long and 
stiff. Both floret and truss are of unusual 
size; stands the sun finely, proving a grand 
bedder. 
Comtesse de Harcourt. Pure snow-white; 
a grand bedder; florets large and beautifully 
formed; extremely free in bloom, forming a 
bank of white. 
A. Fleurot. Dark red, maroon center. 
Clolre de France. Individual . flowers 
very large and double; color salmon-white, 
with a dark, distinct salmon-red center. 
Button. Purplish red; each floret resem- 
bles a rose bud. 
James Vick. Dark salmon; extra good 
for bedding. 
La Favorite. Trasses very large; florets 
of the most beautiful and perfect form, and 
of the very purest, snowiest white in color. 
Montesquieu. Light pink ; very free 
bloomer. 
8. A. Nutt. Rich, dark crimson; the flow- 
ers are of perfect shape and fine size, tho 
trasses massive and produced in great num- 
bers; close, compact habit. 
Guidon. Deep red; this variety outblooms 
all others. 
Lizzie Hamilton. Darkpink; llnebedder. 
Spaulding’s Pet. Rich, dark crimson; 
blooms borne on long stems well above the 
plant; the best crimson bedder we know of 
for our climate. 
PELARGONIUMS, or LADY WASHINGTON 
GERANIUMS 
These havo beautiful flowers, richly 
blotched, so that they are sometimes called 
Pansy Geraniums. 15 cts. 
SCENTED GERANIUMS 
Apple. The most delightfully scented of 
all Geraniums. 15 cts. and 25 cts. 
Nutmeg. Small leaves, resembling tho 
apple-scented. 
Rose. Broad-cut, fragrant leaves. 
Cut-Leaved Rose. Leaves finely cut. 
IVY GERANIUMS 
Carden’s Glory. Fine bright scarlet, the 
best of its color, perhaps; bold, full flower; 
free grower and bloomer, and one of the best 
generally useful of Ivies. 
Incomparable. (Syn., Remarkable.) 
Trusses very large, florets immense and very 
regular in form; quite full; the color is an 
exquisite shade of rosy carmine. 
La Rosie re. Flowers very large and per- 
fectly double, making a lovely rosette in 
shape. Color of the most delicate pink shade, 
and exceedingly attractive. 
P. Crozy. A grand Hybrid between the 
Zonales and Ivies, having the foliage of the 
former, but very heavy in texture, while the 
forms of truss and florets are found only 
among the Ivies. The color is soft bright 
scarlet. 
Souv. Chas. Turner. Florets 2 % inches, in 
trusses 6 inches across. Color a deep bright 
pink, approaching scarlet in color, the upper 
petals feathered maroon; quite double. 
New Double White Ivy Geranium, “ Joan 
of Arc.” The flowers are perfectly double, 
white as snow, and literally cover the plant 
when in full bloom. The foliage is extremely 
handsome, the dense glossy - green leaves 
making a most effective background for the 
great cluster of snow-white flowers. 
La Foudre. Flowers quite double, and of 
bright orange-scarlet color. 
L© Prlntemps. Rosy pink, very beautiful 
and effective. Should be better known and 
more widely grown. 
Galilee. Light rosy pink, veined with lilac; 
extra good. 
Chas. Monselet. Fiery red; upper petals 
nicely marked. Trusses as fine as those of a 
Zonal. 
LADY WASHINGTON GERANIUM, 
