WILSON S. BROWER COMPANY. Inc.. 
CATALOGUE OF SEEDS 
25 
Pkt. 
and long stems, an excellent cut 
flower. 
Shasta, pure white 14 oz., 25c .10 
Sulphur Yellow 14 oz., 25c .10 
Finest Mixed ....14 oz., 25c .10 
Caucasica — House’s New Hybrids. 
Edges ruffled and fringed, light lav¬ 
ender colors to dark blue ....14 oz., 60c .10 
SCHIZANTHUS. H.H.A. (Butterfly 
Flower, or Poor Man’s Orchid.) This 
is one of the daintiest of annuals. 
The seed germinates readily and in a 
few weeks the plant is a mass of small 
but bright flowers in a bewildering 
range of colors, all blotched and 
marked in contrasting shades. The 
foliage is delicate and fern-like. It 
may be sown in spring for garden 
decoration or may be seeded in fall in 
pots in the conservatory or house for 
spring blooming. 
Excelsior Hybrids. A choice strain 
with very large flowers with hand¬ 
some markings on white, buff, bril¬ 
liant rose, blue and purple ground. 
Finest yet offered _ .15 
Wisetonensis Mixed. 114 ft. Profusion 
of flowers varying from almost white 
with yellow eye to brilliant rose with 
bronzy center _ .15 
SEDUM (Stonecrop). Popular dwarf 
hardy Perennials for rock gardens. 
Acre. Yellow. 4 in. _ .25 
SENECIO elegans fl. pi. (Jacobaea), 
H.A. Free flowering pretty annual. 
Mixed colors. 18 in. _ .15 
SENSITIVE PLANT. (See MIMOSA 
pudica.) 
SILENE (Catchfly) America. H.A. 
Mixed colors ___14 oz., 35c .10 
pendula, compacta. This well-known 
variety we can strongly recommend 
for spring bedding _ .10 
SNAPDRAGON (See Antirrhinum). 
SOLANUM capsicastrum nanum (Jeru¬ 
salem Cherry). G.P. Ornamental 
plant for Winter decoration, with 
bright scarlet berries _14 oz., 50c .10 
Cleveland. Valuable as a pot plant. 
Brilliant red fruit _ .25 
STATICE (See EVERLASTING FLOW¬ 
ERS). 
STEVIA Serrata. Numerous pure white 
fragrant flowers. Very useful and 
popular for winter cutting _ .10 
STOKESIA cyanea. (Cornflower aster). 
H.P. Lavender blue flowers. 2 ft. 
14 oz., 35c .10 
STOCKS, Early Giant Imperial. A splen¬ 
did addition to the early forcing class; 
of tall branching habit, from 24 to 30 
inches high and producing a very high 
percentage of double flowers. Mixed 
colors ___14 oz., 35c .15 
Ten-Week Mammoth Flowered. Excel¬ 
lent either for spring or autumn sow¬ 
ing, grow to a great size, with numer¬ 
ous spikes of bloom; splendid class. 
Mixed -10 
Pkt. 
Biennial Stocks. Brompton (Old Eng¬ 
lish Type). Mixed _ .10 
SUNFLOWER. H.A. Single Russian. 
Well-known hardy annuals, the small 
flowering sorts being very useful for 
cutting, while the larger sorts are 
very ornamental and useful, blooming 
all Summer. Enormous flowers. 6 
ft. _ 1 oz., 15c .05 
Tall Double. H.A. 7 to 8 ft. _ .10 
Miniature. H.H.A. 3 to 4 ft. .10 
Maximilian. H.P. This is perhaps the 
tallest of the perennial types growing 
8 feet and sometimes more if the con¬ 
ditions are favorable. It is the last 
one to bloom, flowering as it does in 
October, it has long stalks full of 
small golden yellow flowers. 
SWEET PEAS. H.A. As soon as the 
ground can be worked in Spring sow 
the seed in trenches at least 6 inches 
in depth, then as the plants grow fill 
in the soil about an inch at a time 
until the trenches are full, taking care 
not to cover the plants. Apply liquid 
manure occasionally. Do not allow 
the flowers to form seed. 
Spenser Mixed 1 oz., 25c .05 
Eckford Mixed 1 oz., 15c .05 
SWEET SULTAN (See Centaurea). 
SWEET ROCKET (See Rocket). 
SWEET WILLIAM (Dianthus barba- 
tus). H.B. Showy, of easy culture; 
splendid for beds and borders with 
their rich varied flowers. 
Double-flowering, mixed A4 oz., 25c .10 
Diadem. A deep rich crimson with 
white eye _ 14 oz., 25c .10 
Newport Pink. Salmon rose-pink flow¬ 
ers, borne on long stems. 14 oz., 35c .10 
Scarlet Beauty. Intensely rich deep 
scarlet — _!4 oz., 35c .10 
Holborn Glory, auricula-eyed. 
14 oz., 25c .10 
Single Annual. Mixed flower of good 
size, will bloom the first year. 
14 oz., 25c .10 
Namus compactus fl. pi. Extra double 
dwarf mixed 14 oz., 25c .10 
THUNBERGIA. Finest Mixed. H.A.C. 
Beautiful, rapid growing climbers. 
5 ft. _14 oz., 50c .10 
TITHONIA (Mexican Sunflower) |tP- 
5 ft.) When seed is started indoors, 
this lant makes a brilliant showing 
about August 15 of the first year in the 
Northern States. In mild climates it 
is perennial and can be planted out¬ 
doors spring or fall. The flowers of 
vivid orange-scarlet are like huge 
French Marigolds 3 or 4 inches across. 
They last well in bouquets. The leaves 
have an odd appearance as though 
they had been cut into irregular pat¬ 
terns with scissors .10 
Speciosa. 
TRITOM A. Express Early Hybrids. 
H.H.P. A new perpetual flowering 
