MISS MA RY E. MARTIN, FLORAL PARK, NEW YORK. 
CALLIOPSIS. 
27 
Grows without trouble. Blooms oy hun- 
—-dreds. A lovely flower. Shades of 
orange, yellow, crimson and brown. Pkt., 200 seeds, 3c. 
CALLIOPSIS, New Double. Handsome double sort. 
Golden yellow wine maroon zone. 
Pkt., 200 seeds, 3c. 
CALLIOPSIS. “California 
Sunbeams.” Hardy. These love¬ 
ly improved varieties are much larger 
than any heretofore offered, and have 
the great recommendation of being 
early blooming; the flowers are beauti¬ 
fully formed with very long stems; 
some saucer-shaped, others flat, some 
Cosmos flowered, some exquisitely in¬ 
curved, while others are like great 
buttercups. The petals are broad, 
with pinked, toothed or irregularly 
fringed edges. Some are very light 
yellow, others a deeper shade, darker 
around the eye—all so fine, it is diffi¬ 
cult to say which is most beautiful. 
They are 3 to 4 inches in diam¬ 
eter. Pkt., 100 seeds, 6c. 
CALLIOPSIS LANCEOLATA 
GRANDIFLORA. “Golden 
Glory.” A hardy sort blooming 
from seed the first year. Very large 
golden yellow flowers, of great ele¬ 
gance and beauty. The plant is cov¬ 
ered with flowers the entire summer. 
One of our most artistic flowers. 
Pkt., 100 seeds, 5c. 
CSCHOLTZI A—CALIFORNIA POPPY. 
ESCHOLTZ9A—CALIFORNIA POPPY. 
(California’s 
Golden 
Glory. ) These produce a wealth of beauty—a carpet of gold, unsur¬ 
passed by any flower grown. A flower whose grace is beyond criticism, 
whose beauty is unsurpassed. Produced in bounteous profusion. A 
spray of these is the artist’s ideal. What a picture they make. For 
beds and edgings they are a mass of flowers all summer. The ground 
is covered with the fern-like foliage, overlaid with these golden tulip 
poppies. Pkt., 250 seeds, 5o. 
NEW ESCHOLTZIA “THE GOLDEN WEST.” The 
"TTT" * 1 " 1 , ."" . 1 ' flow¬ 
ers of this grand new variety measure from 3 to 6 inches in diameter, 
they have very large, overlapping petals, often daintily waved at the 
edges. They are _ of various forms, some flat, some cup-shaped, 
others very deep with flaring edges. They are of a light canary-yellow 
color with an orange blotch at the base of the petals, which "blotch 
often suffuses almost the whole flower. They are decidedly beautiful. 
Price, pkt., 6c.; 3 pkts. for 15c. 
GIANT YELLOW TULIP POPPY. 
( Hunnemannia 
Fumariaefolia.) 
In our trial grounds the past two seasons this was one of the showiest 
and most satisfactory plants, in over four hundred trials. Seed sown _.... . _ 
early in May, and by the middle of July the plants are covered with GIANT YELLOW TULIP POPPY, 
their large buttercup-yellow poppy-like blossoms, and they were never out of flower until hard frost. The plants grow 
about 2 feet high, are quite bushy, with beautiful feathery glaucous foliage. Pkt., 100 seeds, 6c. 
