Aster, Super-Giant, Los Angeles 
This, the first of a giant new race, beautifully 
upholds the romantic traditions of the City of 
Sunshine and Flowers. The pure shell-pink flowers 
are full-petaled, deep, and unusually large, yet 
artistically graceful in the feathery effect of the 
interlacing petals. In the annual border they 
stand majestically above their fellow Asters, and 
are best when combined with blue lace flower. 
Pkt. 35 cts. 
Aster yunnanensis 
This beautiful garden gem, offered to American 
gardens for the first time, has dwarf plants bear¬ 
ing clusters of charming lavender-blue daisies an 
inch and a half across in late summer and fall. 
It is one of the finest dwarf perennial Asters, 
soundly perennial and admirably suited to large 
rock-gardens and low perennial borders. The 
seed is very scarce, for the plant is new and rare. 
Pkt. 50 cts. 
Aster yunnanensis 
Aster, Super-Giant, Los Angeles 
Calendula, Pastel Shade Mixture 
This novel mixture contains many tones and shades not pre¬ 
viously obtainable—delicate apricots, beautiful picotees, orange 
shades, cream tones—in fact, every conceivable tint from almost 
pure white through cream and buff to yellow and deep orange. 
Splendid for bedding. Pkt. 25 cts. 
Canterbury Bells, Annual Mixed 
This fine achievement is exactly like the long-known biennial. 
Campanula medium single, except that it comes to bloom in less 
than six months from seed. It is now possible to have these 
flowers in bloom at almost any time of the year. The plants, 
2J4 feet tall, each produce 6 to 8 flower-spikes. Contains dark 
blue, light blue, pink, rose, and white. Pkt. 25 cts. 
Celosia, Lilliput 
Fire Feather. An excellent new variety with plants 1 foot high 
consisting of 15 to 20 branches of eVen length, all terminated by 
brilliant red, feathery cockscombs. Fine for bedding and for 
pot-culture. Pkt. 35 cts. 
Golden Feather. Similar to the above but of a 
dark golden color. Pkt. 35 cts. 
Cosmos, Early Express Mixed 
This excellent strain has earned a very definite place among 
Cosrnos. Its chief advantage is the short time required from seed- 
ing-time to first bloom—45 days—making it the very earliest 
Cosmos so far available. It forms only 3-foot plants, but the single 
flowers compare well in size with those of the Tall Late 
Mammoth-flowering strain. Ht. 3 ft. Pkt. 15 cts. 
Collinsia, Salmon Beauty 
Truly worth a place in the annual garden, this is one of 
the brightest of hardy annuals. The flowers are of a pure 
salmon-rose color and when grown in masses the effect is 
delightful. Pkt. 20 cts. 
Dahlia, Unwin’s Dwarf Semi-Double 
In three months from seed the dwarf, compact plants hold 
a wealth of semi-double Dahlias, held erect on stiff stems 
above the foliage, in deep crimson, pink and rose, mauves, 
scarlet, purple, yellow, and white. The plants, 2 feet high, are 
suited to bedding, require no stakes and can be spaced 20 
inches apart. Pkt. 35 cts. 
Dahlia, Unwin’s Dwarf 
Semi-Double Hybrids 
22 WEST PARK ST., NEWARK, N. J 
9 
New and Rare Flowers 
