Stocks are Popular. . . Beautiful and Easy to Grow. 
SWEET ROCKET (Hesperis) HP AIso known 
as Dame s Rocket; grows 2 to 
3 feet high with spikes of showy, fragrant 
flowers. 
Purple. Dark shade. Pkt. 10 cts.; i/4 oz. 25 cts. 
White. Fine. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 25 cts. 
(Sea Lavender). HA. Produces all 
summer panicles of small flowers 
which can be dried for winter bouquets. 
Kanipf’s Tall Blue. Pkt. 25 cts. 
Rosea Superba. Deep rose. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Mixed Colors. Pkt. 10 cts. 
SNOW ON THE MOUNTAIN See Euphorbia, 
page 8. 
STRAWFLOWER See Everlasting Flowers, page 8. 
CTOPKC HA. These popular flowers are so easily 
^ I vvi. j grown and have so many good qualities 
they deserve a place in every garden. Require 
sandy soil. 
WILSON’S CUT AND COME AGAIN, OR GIANT 
PERFECTION STOCKS 
All same price—25 ets. per pkt.; $1.00 for % oz. 
Of splendid pyramidal growth, freely branching- 
giving an abundance of large spikes of double 
flowers from summer until fall. 2 feet. 
White (Princess Alice). 
Dark Blue. 
Silvery Lilac (Empress Augusta Victoria). 
Light Blue (May Queen). 
Creole. Canary yellow. 
Flesh Color. 
Brown Red. Coppery red. Very attractive. 
Rose. Exquisite shade. 
Collection: 1 pkt. each of above S colors, $1.7.5. 
GIANT-FLOWERING REALTY 
All same price—25 ets. per Pkt. $1.00 per Vs oz. 
Early-flowering forming much-branched plants 
about 2 feet high, having numerous spikes of 
large, double, fragrant flowers; they are of special 
value as pot-plants for greenhouse and for cutting; 
for this purpose seed should be sown from July 
to September; sown in February or March, will 
bloom from mid-summer to frost. 
Almond Blossom. White, shaded carmine. 
Beauty of Nice. Deep flesh. 
Mont Blane. Purest white. 
Monte Carlo. Canary-yellow. 
Hueen Alexandra. Rosy lilac. 
Summer Night. Dark blue. 
Souvenir de 3Ionaco. Crimson. 
Abundance. Rose pink. 
Collection: 1 Pkt. each of above S colors, $1.7.5. 
DWARF L.VRGE-FLOWERING MIXED 
For outdoor sowing. Pkt. 10 cts.; % oz. 60 cts. 
SUNFLOWERS (Helianthus) HA. Plants of ma- 
jestic growth and immense showy 
flowers, suitable for shrubberies, and sub-trop¬ 
ical gardening; the dwarfer kinds, with smaller 
flowers, are charming in mixed borders. 
LARGE-FLOWERED TALL 
Sutton’.s Red Sunflower. 4 to 8 feet. Some flow¬ 
ers of a rich chestnut-red color, others tipped 
with yellow and others slightly washed with 
red. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Globe-Flowered Double. 6 feet. Flowers a rich 
saffron color. Pkt. 10 cts.; i/4 oz. 20 cts. 
Rmssian 3Iammoth. Single. Pkt. 5 cts.; 1 oz. 20 
cts. 
3IINIATLRE-FLOWERED SINGLE AND DOLBLE 
Average Height 4 Feet 
Spreading bushes with graceful foliage and ele¬ 
gantly formed flowers borne for a long time in 
succession; invaluaoie as cut-flowers. 
Double Chrysanthemum-Flowered. Golden yel¬ 
low flowers. Fine . Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 25 cts. 
Double Yellow. Fine for cutting or for garden 
display. Pkt. 10 cts.; % oz. 25 cts. 
Stella* Large golden-yellow petals; small, dark 
center. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 25 cts. 
3Iaroon Prince. Single. Best dwarf red. Pkt. 10 
cts.; 1/4 oz. 35 cts.. 
Excelsior Hybrids. The prevailing colors are 
pale yellow, golden yellow and creamy white, 
some with black centers. Pkt. 10 cts.; i/4 oz. 
25 cts. 
Orion. Petals rolled, resembling Single Cactus 
Dahlia. Yellow dark center. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Diadem (Venus). Lemon yellow flowers with 
black centers. Fine. Pkt. 10 cts.; 14 oz. 25 cts. 
SL3I3IER CYPRESS. See Kochia, page 9. 
SWEET SLLTAN. See Centaurea, page 5. 
Everything has its beauty, but not everyone 
can see it. —Confucius. 
SWEET PEAS HAC. Wllson’s Sllver-Gilt Medal 
Blixture of Spencers. One oz. seed 
for 20 foot row, A beautiful blend of all the 
best and newest varieties. Each color class Is 
properly proportioned so that the mixture will 
give a harmonious whole. Pkt. 10 cts.; oz. 30 
cts.; lb. $1.00; 1 lb. $3.50. (Sweet Peas in 
separate colors at same price.) 
SWEET WILLIAM 
batus). HP. Well-known, at¬ 
tractive, hardy perennials. It is better to raise 
new plants from seed every season than to 
divide the old ones. 
Giant White. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Pink Beauty. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Scarlet Beauty. Pkt. 10 cts. 
1 Pkt. each of the 3 color.s for 25 ct.s. 
Double 3Iixed Dwarf. Very fine. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Single 3Iixed Giant Hybrids. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Single 3Ilxed Dwarf Compact. Pkt. 10 cts. 
TAGETES SIGNATA PU3IILA. See Marigold, p. 10. 
TITHONIA ha. Speciosa, Early Flowering (Gol¬ 
den Flower of the Incas). 8 feet. The 
★ flowers resemble a giant single zinnia of vivid 
orange-scarlet borne on huge bushes with woody 
stems, and large leaves. From seed started in 
March plants in full sun will blossom in late 
August. Pkt. 25 cts. 
TRITOMA (Red-Hot Poker). HP. Handsome bor¬ 
der plants. Flowers borne in compact 
form on stout 3 and 4 foot stems, having the 
appearance at a distance of orange and red 
colored spear heads. Require protection dur¬ 
ing winter. 
Hybrida Early-Flowering 3Iixed. Many interest¬ 
ing colors. Pkt. 25 cts. 
URSINIA (Spenogyne) HAR. Anethoides. Excel¬ 
lent for edgings. The orange, daisy-like 
★ flowers have purple and black centers. 1 foot. 
Flowers all summer. Pkt. 15 cts. 
VENIDIUM FASTUOSUM Hybrids. HA. 2 to 3 
feet. 
(3IONARCH OF THE VELDT) 
A unique annual from South Africa. In this mix¬ 
ture are included white, cream, lemon, yellow, 
orange and buff, each flower 3 to 4 inches across 
with black centers. Plant in full sun. Pkt. 25 cts.; 
5 for $1.00. 
V enidium 
WILSON’S SEEDS 
14 
MONTCLAIR, N. J. 
