HIBISCUS TRIONUM — Trailing Hollyhock. 
Great ivory-hued cups, violet patched at the 
base, and with golden anthers. The center of 
the plant is an upright, flower-laden spire, but 
the basal branches, floriferous also, trail off in 
half procumbent effect. A quick and handsome 
species of easiest culture. Pkt. 10c. 
MALVA MAURITANIA — Great pyramids of 
splendid bloom all summer long. Large flowers 
of rosy lavender, striped gaily with crimson. 
Always good. Six feet. Pkt. 10c. 
NIEREMBERGIA GRACILIS — A lovely and 
dainty flower, with blossoms like crushed silk, 
palest lavender with violet lines. Many stems, 
to 18 inches, with fern-like foliage. Blooms early 
and late, and withstands drought. Pkt. 15c. 
OENOTHERA RUBRICALYX — An Evening 
Primrose that keeps its flowers open all day long. 
The blossoms are like great golden saucers, but 
each with a brightly painted calyx-tube of after¬ 
glow red. Big, robust, branching plants, to 40 
inches. No flower is easier to handle. Pkt. 10c. 
OXALIS SUNSHINE MIRROR—Another name 
for it, equally fitting, is Cloth of Gold. The 15- 
inch plants are mantled in a glorious profusion 
of little bells that glow like molten gold. Easy, 
and flowers for months. Pkt. 10c. 
PARSONSIA LANCEOLATA—Curiously formed 
flowers in pansy suggestion. The two large up¬ 
per petals are richest maroon, veined with vel¬ 
vety black, but the four lower are brilliant crim¬ 
son. Branching plants to three feet or more, 
blooming excessively early and late. Pkt. 10c. 
TORENIA BLEND—Its richly velvety blossoms 
suggest that manifest absurdity, a cross of Pansy 
and Snapdragon. They are skyblue and royal 
purple, touched with gold, or sometimes white, 
marked with rose. Torenia flowers long and 
freely. It thrives exceedingly in the garden, but 
it is used also as a pot plant, or for the window 
box. Pkt 15c. 
ZINNIA ANGUSTIFOLIA HYBRIDA—In this 
delightful hybrid strain of the Mexican Zinnia, the 
blossoms vary from single to fully double, but 
always with a lightsome starry individuality that 
is quite surprising in Zinnia. Often the petals 
are taperingly twisted, or down-turned. There 
will be brillant browns, sulphur, orange, gold, 
blood-red; and a petal may start with one color 
and finish quite another. 18 inches. Pkt. 15c. 
OFFER 1S5—One pkt. each of above for $1.65. 
SEEDS OF WILD FLOWERS 
I have blended seeds of North American wild 
flowers to form this mixture. Altogether there 
are here at least 400 different species. The bulk 
of the mixture is made up of about 100 kinds, 
the remaining 300 being too scarce to permit 
much of them being used. Seeds of a few tem¬ 
perate zone wild flowers of other continents have 
been added. Here are some of the kinds: Violet, 
Gentian, Gerardia, Monarda, Golden and Purple 
Asters, Pentstemon, Rudbeckia, Golden Rod, Sa- 
batia, Sisyrinchium, Rose, Wintergreen, Pipsis- 
sewa, Trailing Arbutus, Celandine, Buttercup, 
Mertensia, Gay Feather, Helianthus, Starry 
Campion, Petalostemon, Saponaria, Cassia, Par- 
dantlius, Rhexia, Yucca, Flowering Cactus, Clay- 
tonia, Wild Sweet William Wild Geranium, 
Jack-in-the-Pulpit, Trillium, Mirnulus, Bloodroot, 
etc. y s oz, 20c; 3 4 oz. 35c; 1 oz. $1.00. 
6 
