* 
S. Canned & Sons’ 'Floral Guide 
Daisies (Bel'lis). 
THE BEST BEDDING. 
DAISY. 
RED— Quilled, ordinary bedding . 
WHITE—Ordinary Bedding . 
MOTTLED RED AND WHITE, VICTORIA 
fine bedder . 
ROB ROY— Quilled ; intense red . 
GTr-^jEW persons—gardeners m particular— 
3|Hl/ have the slightest idea of the effect 
these have (when planted in lines like 
other plants) and their easy management, or 
they would fill their beds every autumn, and 
so have a grand display, equally as satisfactory 
and with half the trouble, as the ordinary 
summer plants. With these and a few Violas 
and Primroses, every lawn can be made gay 
and beautiful all rhe early spring and summer 
months. 
Per doz. Per 100 
*. a. < d. 
. I 0 TO 
. 10 7 0 
sun. MAGPIE—Very large; 
. 10 7 0 
.. 16 7 0 
and seldom seen, though highly 
engraving correctly illustrates. 
HEN AND CHICKENS—Another of the old curiosities, 
interesting, the peculiar growth of which the accompanying 
each: 7s. per dozen. 
VARIETIES WITH VARIEGATED FOLIAGE. 
AUCUB.® FOLIA—Crimson. 4s. per do/..; fid. each. 
AUCUB/®FOLLA—White. Is. each. 
Delphi' niums. 
DOUBLE AND SINGLE-FLOWERED. 
T HIS family is perhaps the noblest of all the hardy plants. Few have seen the named kinds, 
those who have not cannot form the slightest conception of their splendour. We have often 
been amazed at the intensity of their colours, and spikes of flowers averaging from one to two 
feet long. They should he in every garden, for if once planted beautiful flowers of all shades of 
blue may be cut four months in the year. 
DELPHINIUMS. 
The undermentioned cau be Highly recommended as fine improvements 
BEN DAVIES—Grand spike, dark purple and violet, black eye. 
DR. MORGAN—Purple white eye • v»rv large and district. 
FINALE—Violet, white eve. 
MIDAS—Bright blue, veined rose. 
MISS MACINTYRE—Very large; heliotrope, edged blue. 
NTJPHAR—Large; deep blue, inn*r petals plum, white eye. 
( 85 ) 
