Hollyhocks, Prize Double. 
The perfect doubleness of the magnificent, large flowers 
will please the most critical. All the best colors, from deep 
yellow, red rose, light buff, carmine, scarlet, flesh color, creamy- 
white tinted with rose, purple, yellow on dark ground, crim¬ 
son flaked with salmon, cherry red, cream on violet ground, 
lilac on brown ground, dark crimson to pure white,also black. 
If sown early in March or April the plants will bloom the first 
year. All mixed colors Pkt., 50 seeds, 5 cts. 
Double Maroon, 50 seeds, 5c Double Salmon Rose, 50 seeds, 5c 
Bright Pink, 50 seeds, 5c “ White, 50 seeds, 5c 
Bright Red, 50 seeds, 5c “ Ye.low, 50 seeds, 5c 
HollyhocksDouble Alleghany. 
Mammoth flowers, wonderfully formed of loosely arranged 
fringed petals, which look as if made from the finest China 
silk, and have none of the formalitv of the ordinary type. The 
colors vary from the palest shrimp pink to deep red. 
Pkt., 50 seeds, 5 cts. 
Hollyhocks, Single. 
Many prefer the single-flowering Hollyhocks. They are 
usually of freer growth than the doubles, and present a very 
handsome appearance when covered with their artistic blos¬ 
soms. Pkt., 50 seeds, 5 cts. 
Annual Hollyhocks. 
This new strain possesses all the virtues of the double old- 
fashioned Hollyhocks with the additional advantage of bloom¬ 
ing from seed the first year. Plants started from seed sown in 
March or April in 1 he house or hot bed, transplanted in May 
into their permanent place, will bloom in August and continue 
until fall The plants branch out freely and are not easily 
attacked by the Hollyhock fungus, therefore retain their fresh, 
5 r, £;ht green leaves until late. The flowers are double, semi¬ 
double, or single. Pkt., 50 seeds, 5 cts. 
Impatiens Sultani. 
This most distinct and beautiful 
plant is almost a perpetual bloomer. 
The flowers are of a brilliant rosy 
scarlet color and are produced so 
freely that a full grown specimen 
appears to be a ball of flowers and 
continues in full beauty several 
months. Pkt., 100 seeds, 5 cts. 
Job’s Tears,CoixLachryma. 
Curious, ornamental grass, with 
broad, corn-like leaves and seeds 
of a light slate color. Valuable for 
the formation of winter bouquets. 
Strings of handsome beads are 
made from the seeds. Hardy 
annual, 3 feet high. 
Pkt., 30 seeds, 5 cts.; oz., 20 cts. 
Kochia Scoparia 
or Summer Cypress. 
The plants grow freely from 
seed sown in the open ground, 
when the trees are coming out in 
leaf, and from the earliest stage of 
growth in the spring until they 
reach maturity in the fall the plants 
are always of globe-like form. The 
plants branch freely, and stems are 
clothed with slender light green 
leaves. Early in the fall the ends 
of shoots are thickly set with small 
bright-scarlet flowers— the bushy 
plants resembling balls of fire. The 
plants are equally showy, planted 
singly to show the round ball-like 
form on all sides, or grown in con¬ 
tinuous rows or hedges, 
Pkt., 200 seeds, 5 cts. 
The Famous Chinese Kudzu. 
“Jack-and-the-Bean-Stalk Vine” 
A vine that will grow everywhere. 
Flourishes where nothing else will 
grow, and lasts for many years 
The large bold leaves of the 
brightest green afford a dense 
shade. Its greatest feature is its 
wonderfully strong growth, which 
makes it invaluable for covering 
arbors, fences, porches, dead or old 
trees, etc. The Kudzu Vine is a 
native of China, where it is grown 
not only for the beauty of the plant, 
butalsc for the edible value of its 
roots. The vine is haidy. grows 60 
ft., with dense foliage to the 
ground. Pkt., 10 cts. 
Mrs. Edgar I. Fields, George¬ 
town, t orn., April 6, 1909. I 
wish to inform you I have beau¬ 
tiful Cyclamens from seed I 
had from you some three years 
agv- _| 
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