CHOICE FLOWER SEEDS 
°<^ 3 => 
11 
PURPLE FOUNTAIN 
GRASS 
(Penmsetum 
Sueppelianum) 
1451. Decidedly the 
most ornamental decora¬ 
tive grass ever intro¬ 
duced. and will be found 
as useful for room, hall 
or table decoration ns 
many a palm. Fine pur¬ 
ple plumes a foot long. 
Pkt, 10c. 
GREV1LLEA 
ROBUSTA 
1460. (Silk Oak.) 
Beautiful and graceful 
fern-leaved foliage plant. 
Pkt., 10c. 
GYPSOPHILA 
Dainty free flowering 
plants of easy culture. 
Fine for mixing in bou¬ 
quets, giving them an 
gypsophila paniculata. airy fairy look that is 
charming: iy feet high. 
IlSO. Elegans. Star-shaped, white and pink flowers. 
Pkt., 5c. 
1-181. Paniculata. Produces numerous panicles of 
small, white, handsome flowers: fine for bouquets. Pkt., 5c. 
HELIANTHU3 
(Sec Sunflower) 
HIBISCUS (Marsh Mallow) 
1510. Afrlcanus. Creamy yellow, with purple centre. 
Pkt.. 5c. 
1541. Palustrls. Large pink flowers. Pkt., 5c. 
1542. Callfornicus. Large white carmine centre. 
Pkt,, 10c. 
15-13. Sunset. Very large, yellow, line. Pkt., 10c. 
HELIOTROPE. 
HELIOTROPE 
Deliciously fragrant 
flowering plants, 1 to 2 
feet high. Favorites for 
|)ot culture'in winter and 
bedding in summer. 
1520. Finest Mixed. 
Pkt 5c 
152l’. King or the 
Blacks. Rich purple. 
Pkt., 10c. 
1522. Lein oi no*s 
Giant Hybrids. Im¬ 
mense clusters; very fra¬ 
grant. Pkt., loc. 
HOLLYHOCK 
Grand summer and 
autumn flowering plants. 
Old inhabitants of onr 
garden, but marvelously 
improved of lute years 
both in doubleness and 
enlarged size. 
Chaters. 
1562. 
1500. 
1561. 
1558. 
1559. “ 
1563. 
Prize Double, Red. Pkt.. 10c. 
" “ Pink. Pkt., 10c. 
“ " White. Pkt., 10c. 
" “ Yellow. Pkt., 10c. 
“ “ Salmon. Pkt., 10c. 
“ " Crimson. Pkt., 10c. 
“ “ Mixed. Pkt., 10c. 
New Alammoth Flowering “Allegheny Hollyhocks" 
1564. The flowers of this new variety are so different 
from the old conventional one3 that but for the similar habit 
of the plant it would not be taken for a Hollyhock. 
They are from 4 to 6 inches in diameter, ranging from 
semi-double to double, and finely fringed and curled. 
The colors are shell pink, rose ana ruby red, a shade or 
two deeper at the centre, and exquisitely tinted towards the 
edge. Price, per pkt., 10c.: 3 pkts., 25c. 
G. H. Burnett, St. Johns, N. B., Canada, March 15, 1905, 
writes: •• Y'our Sweet Peas have always given me the greatest 
satisfaction. 1 have bought from other houses, but the 
results in growth, bloom, variety of color and earliness could 
not compare with yours.” 
For Sweet Peas see page 83. 
HUMULUS J APONICUS OR JAPANESE 
HOP 
1620. Very ornamen¬ 
tal and fast growing an¬ 
nual climber from Japan. 
Pkt. oc. 
1621. H u ill ulus 
.1 nponicui Vurlo- 
gatus. A beautiful vari¬ 
ety with variegated foli¬ 
age, resisting heat and 
the ravages of insects. 
Pkt., 10c. 
KENILWORTH 
IVY 
17S0. A very neat 
climber, clings to walls 
and is a valuable plant 
f o r hanging - baskets, 
vases, etc. Pkt., 10c. 
LANTANA 
1720. Rapid-growing, 
constant-blooming, ten¬ 
der perennial plants for 
pot culture in the winter 
or garden decoration in 
the summer; clusters of 
orange, white, pink, etc.: 
mixed colors; 1 to 3 feet. 
Pkt., 10c. 
nUMin.US Olt JAl’ HOP. 
LARKSPUR 
Quick-growing, free-flowering annuals. 
1065. Dwarf Gorman Roekot. Hyacinth-flowered 
Larkspur; mixed. Pkt., 5c. 
1063. E in p o r o r 
Larkspur. Has beauti¬ 
ful, long spikes of bril¬ 
liant dark blue, tricolor 
and red striped; double 
flowers. Pkt., 5c. 
LATHYRUS 
Everlasting or 
Hardy Swoot Fens. 
Hardy climbers, grow¬ 
ing 6 to 8 feel high when 
trained on a trellis. The 
flowers are borne in largo 
clusters; but have no fra¬ 
grance. a beautiful plant. 
1740. Lati folios 
Rod. A handsome free- 
flowering plant; useful 
for covering trellises, old 
stumps, fences, etc. 
Flowers a beautiful 
scarlet. Pkt., 10c. 
1711. La t If oil us 
Albus. Large clusters 
of pure white; grand, 
hardy, low climber. 
Pkt., 10c. 
1712. S p 1 o n d (i it s, 
A line novelty from 
California, bearing dense 
clusters of brilliant deep 
rose flowers, l’kt., 10c. larkspur. 
No. 1713. rink Bounty. We have here an entirely new 
variety, the color of which Is a delicately shaded pink on the 
standard, the lacing on the edge being paler limn the 
centre; the wings are deeper pink, of a very rich shade, 
giving it a very striking appearance. Price, pkt., 6c.; per 
oz., 20c. |> 
No. 1744. Evorlast- 
ing Feu — Crimson. 
Pkt., 5c. 
LO B E LI A (Oompacla 
Varieties) 
Compact plants, 4 to 6 
inches high, forming 
little mounds of bloom. 
1810. Crystal Pal¬ 
ace. Rich blue. Pkt., 10c. 
1845. Mixed Com¬ 
pacts Varieties. Pkt., 
6c. 
Erinus, or Trailing 
Varieties, 
Useful for vases or 
hanging baskets or 
rockeries. 
1844. Mixed, Trail¬ 
ing Varieties. Pkt., 5c. 
LOBELIA. 
