FLOWER 
10c. 
10c. 
10c. 
10c. 
30c. 
DIGITALIS, or Foxglove 
GLOXINIA-FLOWERED. These improved Foxgloves are very 
showy, hardy plants; they are easy to grow and produce 
freely spikes, 4 to 5 feet high, well furnished with large 
Gloxinia-like flowers of various colors, including white, 
cream, rose, red and other shades, all of which have beau¬ 
tiful throat markings, spots and blotches of purple, maroon, 
etc. They are more robust than the ordinary garden 
Digitalis, have stouter stems and larger flowers. 
Gloxinia-flowered, White, Spotted. Pkt. 10c. 
Lilac, Spotted. 
Purple, Spotted. 
Rose, Spotted. 
Mixed Colors. 
Collection of above 4 sepa 
rate sorts . 
Digitalis Grandiflora. Very charming flowers of soft 
chrome-yellow on 3-foot spikes. Pkt. 10c. 
Eschscholtzias 
Eschscholtzias (California Popoies) are among our most 
beautiful and popular annuals, being of the easiest cul¬ 
ture. From spring-sown seeds they flower profusely until 
late in the autumn, making them invaluable for bedding. 
The plants are of dwarf branching habit about 1 foot high. 
Golden West. Flowers of immense size, often 4 inches in 
diameter. The colors are intense and shining yellows. In 
some an orange blotch almost suffuses the whole flower, in 
others it runs into the yellow in fine penciled lines, others again 
have an orange centre with a margin of clear yellow. . Pkt. 10c. 
Burbank’s White Gaint. A reselected strain making it by 
far the best white Eschscholtzia ever offered. Pkt. 15c. 
The Mikado. This new “California Poppy” produces large 
saucer-shaped flowers of a lustrous orange-crimson. It received 
an award of merit from the English Royal Horticultural 
Society... Pkt. 10c. 
Crimson King. The best of the red-flowering varieties. Flowers 
about 3 inches across; exterior bright crimson, interior rich satiny 
carmine; plant bushy and compact, about 1 foot high by 15 inches 
across. Fowers freely and continuously during the summer. Pkt. 10c. 
Dainty Queen. Of compact growth with flowers of creamy blush 
tinted coral-pink, deepening in shade toward the edges.. . Pkt. 10c. 
Erecta Compacta Mandarin. In this charming new variety we 
have an entirely new habit in Eschscholtzias. The plants are 
of upright, compact, bushy form, producing freely large flowers 
of rich, deep orange color, shaded crimson. Pkt. 10c. 
BUSH ESCHSCHOLTZIA 
(II unnem a nnia f uma rice folia .) 
Grows into a bush 2 feet high, with the beautiful foliage of the 
Eschscholtzia enlarged. Large cup-shaped flowers, 3 inches across, 
on stems 1 2-inches long; the color is of clear bright yellow, contrasting 
vividly with the bunch of golden stamens in the centre. Pkt. 10c. 
ea d rly a flowering Grass or Spice Pinks 
(Dianthus Plumarius Hybridus Nanus, Jl. pi.) 
These arc great improvements over the charming time-honored inhabi¬ 
tant of old fashioned gardens. The flowers of this new type are much larger, 
are borne more profusely on shorter, stiff stems. In these new Pinks we have a 
large variety ot colors and markings; the color, of course, refers to the centre of 
the flower, the remainder being white or blush with a band of color near the 
margin; the colors include blood-red, rose, maroon, purple, pink, blush, spotted, 
laced, variegated, etc., and they commence blooming about two weeks earlier. 
They are excellent perennial garden plants, about 1 root high, vigorous, hardy, 
and flower profusely during spring and early summer. The flowers are very 
large, double, beautifully fringed, and emit a clove-like perfume. Mixed 
Colors. Pkt. 25c. 
(See illustration previous page.) 
PERFECTION PINK 
A superb strain of the hardy Grass Pink—• Dianthus plumarius —bearing 
enormous double flowers of perfect form. Smooth round petals of pure white, 
edged with deep crimson, very fragrant. Pkt. 25c. 
CROWN "GRASS" PINKS. 
A new race of hardy “Grass Pinks” with branching flower stalks 10 to 12 
inches high, carrying large deliciously fragrant single, semi-double and double 
flowers with fringed petals; colors white, carmine, rose, lilac, etc. Each flower 
marked in the center with a crimson or purple crown. They flower from May 
to July. Pkt. 15c. 
{See illustration previous page.) 
MAIDEN PINKS 
This pretty type of hardy Pinks—■ Dianthus delloides —forms low mats of 
Grass-like foliage about 3 inches high, above which is thrown during spring and 
early summer a profusion of small single flowers not over % of an inch in 
diameter on stems 6 to 8 inches in length. Colors red, rose and white, all 
adorned with a central zone of crimson. Pkt. 10c. 
Digitalis Monstrosa, colors 
A very unique and beautiful type, producing long spikes of large flowers 
of various colors, many of which are beautifully spotted, etc., but the striking 
feature of this strain is the enormous bell-shaped blossom that tops each cpike 
of flowers. Pkt. 15c. 
Henderson's"PICTURESQUE GARDENS" 
is a beautifully illustrated new book that will 
give you many suggestions about decorating your 
Lawns, Garden and Grounds. s " 9 p 4 age 
