FUCHSIAS 
FUCHSIAS. As garden shrubs, pot plants or window box 
flowers, the fuchsias in the new and modern varieties bring 
marvelous beauty and splendor to us such as no other flowers 
can produce. They are becoming more popular each season 
and the Fuchsia Society of America is making flower lovers 
acquainted with their exotic charm. 
Portland and the entire coast region enjoys a climate most 
favorable to fuchsia culture, as they like the cool damp 
weather and thrive in partial shade, while enjoying rich loose 
soils and copious water during dry warm weather. 
Plants may be set out from early April on to July and will 
flower until the frost of fall brings a stop. If the bushes are 
covered with a heavy layer or mound of peat moss they will 
survive the winters here very successfully as we have proven 
repeatedly. 
We are growers of Oregon’s first Fuchsia Collection, com 
prising over 50 modern varieties which are available to our 
customers in varied sizes from the 2 1 / £-inch pots to 5 and fl¬ 
inch specimens ranging in price from 15c to $1.50, according 
to size, perfection and age of varieties. 
Special assortments: 1 each of 12 varieties, our selection, 
$2.50. 7 varieties, our selection, $1.50. 
Dalliance. A very large leaved sort of rather spreading 
growth becoming semi-pendulous with flowering age, branches 
terminating with large clusters of cerise red flowers. One of 
the outstanding sorts for window-box planting. 15-25 and 50c 
sizes. 
GENERAL DRUDE. Large, flowered mauve to plum with 
scarlet. 
STOE.M KING. Very full roundish white flowers, semi- 
drooping. 
AVIATOR. Long pendulous white with twisted sepals of 
red. 
BLACK PRINCE. Saucer-like formed flower of purple to 
plum color. 
BLUE BOY. Blue to rose center and white to rose calix. 
DUCHESSE OF ALBANY. Carmine-scarlet corolla, creamy 
white calix. 
MARINKA. F ierv scarlet throughout with arching growth. 
LITTLE BEAUTY. Compact growing, lavender-blue with 
pink. 
MME. THIEBAUD. Bright violet-rose, deep rose calix. 
CALEDONIA. Semi-trailing, carmine-pink with red calix. 
SPECIOSA. Orange-red corolla, orange tipped green calix. 
RICCARTONI. A sun loving, small flowered shrub with 
masses of purple-red flowers good for shrubbery borders. 
All Fuchias are benefitted by applications of NuLife fer¬ 
tilizer. 5-lb. package, 50c; directions enclosed. 
Pink Pearl. A fine semi-double variety of neat upright 
growing type of free flowering habit with soft pink petals 
and rose to white sepals. 
Monterey. Large leaved of spreading growth producing 
clusters of pendulous flowers with calix of soft pink sepals 
flushed a pleasing orange; corolla of good size in the most 
brilliant orange pink, the whole producing a color effect of 
startling beauty. 3-in. 50c; 4-in. $1.00. 
Minnesota. Of spreading and arching growth with creamy 
white calix, pink pistil and large size corolla of rich plum 
purple. 25c to 50c. 
Lord Byron. A rather dwarfish compact grower producing 
masses of flowers with medium size corolla of deepest black 
purple when first opening, then turning to a reddish plum 
purple. Calix of bright scarlet is in brilliant contrast. 15c 
to 35c. 
Annie Earl. Upright growing, corolla bright cerise red with 
calix of creamy white color. 15-25c. 
Souvenir de Henry Henkel. The young foliage is of bronzy 
coloring turning green as it reaches maturity. Flowers of 
distinct form with long tubular calix and short corolla of 
rich orange pink color under the rose pink sepals. A hand¬ 
some sort worthy of space in all collections. 25-50c. 
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