c 
K E N D E L ' S 
SEED 
S T O 
flowers, and keeping them picked will extend the flowering period. A mulching of Sheep Manure twice 
a month and a dusting of Tobacco Dust as often, will make them grow and keep the insects away. 
The Giant flowering only are listed. 
NO. PIvT. 
304 Trimardeau Mixed. *4 oz. 75c, oz. $2.50.. .20 
305 Bugnot. Mixed; stained.20 
306 Parisian. Mixed; stained.20 
307 Masterpiece. Mixed, blotched and curled .20 
308 Cassier’s Blotched. Mixed.20 
309 Madame Perret. Wine shades.20 
310 Pure White .20 
311 Imperial Blue. Blue.20 
312 Lord Beaconsfield Improved. Purple and 
white .20 
313 Indigo Blue .20 
314 Cardinal. Rich red.20 
315 Azure Blue .20 
316 English Faced. Mixed.20 
317 Black. True .20 
318 SUPERB MIXED. Our own mixture of 
all the above large-flowering sorts in¬ 
cluding the very choicest Pansies grown. 
It is unsurpassed. % oz. $1.00, 14 oz. 
$1.75, oz. $6.00.20 
Plants raised from our own stock seed 
NO. PKT. 
319 FANCY SELECT. This mixture is our 
own selection from the above list of all 
the rarest, high-priced varieties and is 
intended for the specialist. None of the 
ordinary colors are included but only 
the new, rare, unusual shades. % oz. 
$1.75, oz. $6.00.20 
320 English Giants. A collection of the larg¬ 
est and choicest grown in England. x /s 
oz. $1.25, 14 oz. $2.00, oz. $7.00.25 
321 Tufted Pansies. (Viola Cornuta.) Until 
recently, these have been little appreci¬ 
ated in this country. In France and 
England they are used extensively for 
borders, where their masses of bright 
flowers are charming.20 
322 Orchid Flowering. This distinct strain 
includes all the unusual shades of col¬ 
oring in Pansies; chamois, terra-cotta, 
pink, lilac, rose and orange. Medium in 
size, yet dainty and admired for their 
charming markings .20 
one dozen in a basket. Ready in May. 
PASSION FLOWER. 
Few effects are more charming than these blue 
Passion flowers covering a greenhouse wall with 
their rich green foliage and sky-blue blossoms. 
NO. PKT. 
323 Cacrulia Grandiflora. Blue .10 
PENTSTEMON. (Fuenffaden, Bartfaden.) 
Beautiful and attractive, hardy, herbaceous 
plants, with long, graceful spikes of richly col¬ 
ored flowers. Succeed in a light loam, and 
should have a dry situation, as they suffer more 
from wet than cold during the winter. 
324 Hybrid Extra Mixed. Fine large flow¬ 
ered strain. Perennial. 2 ft.10 
325 Gloxiniodes, “Sensation.” As a bedding 
plant this takes rank with the Petunia, 
Phlox, etc., etc. It grows about 2 feet 
high, every branch being a spike of 
large, trumpet-like flowers in a very 
wide range of bright colors, including 
rose, red, carmine, cherry, pink, lilac, 
purple, etc. Not quite hardy and best 
treated like Petunias, Verbenas, Salvia, 
etc.10 
SINGLE PETUNIA. (Petunie.) 
For outdoor decoration or house culture few 
plants equal the Petunia in effectiveness. They 
commence flowering early and continue a sheet 
of bloom throughout the whole season until killed 
by frost; easily cultivated, only requiring a good 
soil and sunny position. 
326 Giant Ruffled. Coppery red. An attrac¬ 
tive new shade.i.. .25 
327 Mixed Giant Ruffled. Flowers of un¬ 
usual size and substance, ruffled and 
fringed in most beautiful colors; half 
dwarf. Trade pkt. $1.00.50 
328 California Giants. Magnificent strain of 
immense flowers in many shades, all 
with veined throats.50 
329 Rosy Morn. A soft carmine pink with 
white throat; grows bushy, 8 inches high 
and makes an effective border.10 
330 Elk’s Pride. Best strain of blackish 
purple witli plain edge.25 
331 Extra Choice Mixed Hybrid. Excells for 
mass planting, in brilliancy and contin¬ 
uous flowering. y 8 oz. 25c, oz. $1.75.10 
Single Fringed Type 
These are intended for hanging baskets and 
window boxes to hang over the sides. Large 
flowers in clear, rich, solid colors. 
332 Pride of Portland. Deep rose.20 
333 Scarlet Beauty .20 
334 White Beauty .20 
334| Pink Beauty .20 I 
It is, perhaps, not generally understood by the 
buying public that seed of the double sorts are 
only obtained by artificially fecundating single 
blooms with the pollen from the double. This 
makes the seed necessarily high priced. In spite 
of all possible care only a small percentage will 
produce double flowers, but the singles are of 
an unusually fine quality. The finest doubles 
are always grown from seed; when propagated 
from cuttings they degenerate. 
The weaker seedlings should be carefully saved, 
as these invariably produce the finest double 
blooms. The same is true of the single sorts, 
the large strong seedlings usually being weedy, 
while the, at first, least promising ones produce 
the very finest flowers of the best colorings. 
It is always best to sow Petunias indoors and 
transplant to the open in May. 
NO. PKT. 
335 Double Mixed Fringed. Extra fringed, 
blotched and striped, fecundated with 
double of the best strain. % pkt. 25c... .50 
Plants ready in May. 
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