8 
WILSON’S SEEDS 
WILSON’S EVERGREEN 
WITH BENT PAGE 1 
Chrysanthemum favorites 1 , 1 
■ ' '■ ■ ——. flowers. These hardy 
annuals are summer-flowering- border plants, 
quite distinct from the hardy perennial and 
autumn-flowering- sorts. 
Northern Star. White, black center. Pkt. 10 cts.; 
14 oz. 30 cts. 
Morning Star. Sulphur-yellow, very pretty. Pkt. 
10 cts.; Vt oz. 30 cts. 
Evening Star (C. segetum; Golden Marguerite). 
Pure golden yellow flowers, 3 inches across. 
Pkt. 10 cts.; % oz. 30 cts. 
Mixed Single (Tricolor). Pkt. 10 cts.; % oz. 30c 
Yellow Double. Rich color. Pkt. 10 cts. 
White Double. Fine. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Double Mixed. Pkt. 10 cts.; 14 oz. 25 cts. 
Shasta Daisy. Alaska H.P. Ball’s reselected. 
Very large-flowering. Pkt. 15 cts.; 2 for 
25 cts. 
Cineraria 
TP. One of the most useful and 
ornamental greenhouse plants. 
Mixed Grandiflora Prize. Pkt. 50 cts. 
HA. Does well in sun or shade; 
H.ICX. grows 2 to 2 Vz ft. high, with leafy 
racemes of double flowers. Splendid for cut¬ 
ting. Blooms all summer. 
Mixed Double. New shades. Pkt. 10 cts.; Vs oz. 
25 cts. 
rtpon ¥ anfpvri (Physalis Pranchetti). 
^nmese i^amern HP A harc i y pe renmai 
grown for its showy scarlet-red seed-pods 
which are easily dried for winter bouquets. 
The flowers are white followed by the large 
lanterns. Easily grown in any soil. Pkt. 
10 cts.; % oz. 40 cts.; V 2 oz. 75 cts. 
Venidium fastuosum 
(Monarch of the Veldt) 
A unique annual that suggests the exotic 
splendor of its native home, South Africa. 
Its brilliant orange daisy-like flowers, 4 
inches across, with shining black centers, are 
placed to perfection in a setting of soft grey 
woolly foliage, making this a desirable and 
brilliantly showy plant and a most desirable 
flower for cutting. It needs warm soil for 
quick germination. Start the seed in a hotbed 
in March or April. Outside it should not be 
sown until May. The plants branch freely and 
will bloom abundantly in less than three 
months from seed. Received Award of Merit, 
R. H. S., England. Pkt. 25 cts.; 5 pkts., $1.00. 
Blue Dace Flower. See Page 5 
Cactus. Mixed Varieties. See Page 3 
Cockscomb 
(Celosia cristata). HA. Free- 
blooming annuals, growing best 
■ . . in rather light soil, not too rich 
but with plenty of moisture and blooming 
all summer. Fine for drying for winter 
bouquets. 
Our seed produces large combs. 
Fire King. Fiery crimson. Extra fine. Pkt. 25 cts. 
Empress. Rich crimson. Pkt. 15 cts. 
Dwarf Mixed. Extra. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Feathered Cockscombs 
(Celosia plumosa). HA. 
Make fine plants for large beds or groups; the 
plumes can be cut and dried for winter bouquets. 
Thompsoni magnifica, Mixed. 
Pkt. 25 cts. 
Pride of Castle Gould. All shades of yellow and 
rose to crimson. Splendid. 
Pkt. 25 cts.; Vs oz. $1.00. 
Childsii. See Chinese Woolflower, page 7. 
Climbing Vines from Seed 
Climbing vines are very useful in camouflag¬ 
ing some fence or telegraph pole or pile of 
rocks, with their attractive foliage or brilliant 
display of color, transforming them into beau¬ 
tiful spots. 
Mixed Annual. 
Pkt. 10 cts.; V± oz. 25 cts.; V 2 oz. 40 cts.; oz. 
75 cts. 
HA. Produces thousands of beautiful 
LOSmOS flowers in white, pink and crimson 
1 - ■ shades. When about a foot high pinch 
tops to induce bushy growth. 
Wilson’s Giant-Flowered (Late) 
Lady Lenox. Pink. Pkt. 5 cts.; X A oz. 25 cts. 
Lady Lenox. White. Pkt. 5 cts.; V± oz. 25 cts. 
Perfection, Crimson. Pkt. 5 cts.; X A oz. 25 cts. 
Perfection, Mixed. Pkt. 5 cts.; V± oz. 20 cts.; 
oz. 50 cts. 
Wilson’s Extra-Early Cosmos 
Flower in July 
Crimson. Pkt. 5 cts.; Vt oz., 25 cts.; oz. 75 cts. 
White. Pkt. 5 cts.; X A oz. 25 cts.; oz. 75 cts. 
Pink. Pkt. 5 cts.; X A oz. 25 cts.; oz. 75 cts. 
Mixed. Pkt. 5 cts.; X A oz. 25 cts.; oz. 75 cts. 
Extra-Early Double-Crested Cosmos 
The flowers are of good jdze, with fully double 
centers and an outer row or crest of broad ray- 
petals. The best of all Cosmos for cut-flowers. 
Mixed Colors. Pkt. 25 cts. 
