BUTZER’S SEED STORE, PORTLAND, OREGON 
35 
BUTZER’S FLOWER SEEDS 
STANDARD VARIETIES, NOVELTIES and SPECIALTIES 
Plant flowers for your table, flowers for your home, and flowers for your friends. You can never have too 
many flowers. An abundance of pretty bouquets can be had with so little work and so little expense that every 
home should have the cheering influence of flowers. The culture of many is so very simple that anyone can 
succeed. Flowers are divided into three classes: Annuals, which produce flowers, mature and die in one season. 
Biennials, which grow from seed one year and bloom and die the second year. Many of these will produce 
flowers the first year if sown early enough. Perennials, which live several years, producing flowers annually 
after first season. These are grown from seed, also by setting out cuttings, slips, or divisions of roots. Peren¬ 
nials are very satisfactory, as they live many years and produce large quantities of very beautiful flowers. 
ABRONIA 
500—Umbellata Grandiflora (Sand Verbena)—6 in. 
A charming trailing succulent plant, with Verbena¬ 
like heads of fragrant flowers, of bright rose with 
white center; it delights in a dry, poor soil and sunny 
situations on rock-work. Per pkt. 10c. 
ABUTILON 
505—Royal Prize (Flowering Maple or Chinese Bell 
Flower)—3 to 4 ft. Per pkt. 10c. 
*ACHILLEA (Milfoil. Yarrow) 
Achilleas are of easy culture and grow in any good 
garden soil. They are useful for the border, wild gar¬ 
den or shrubbery ; also for cutting. 
507—The Pearl—2 ft. June to August. Pure white, 
fine for cutting; blooms all summer. Per pkt. 10c. 
ACROCLINIUM (Everlasting) 
510—New Large Flowered Double Hybrids 
The double flowers are extremely large, at least 
twice the size of the ordinary strain, on 12 to 18 inch 
stems, which are borne freely over a long flowering 
period. The range of color is most remarkable, being 
especially rich in shades of salmon, apricot, pink, rose 
and cerise, with white and creamy tones to balance up 
the pastel mixture. Pkt. 15c. 
512—Roseum Flore Alba Pleno—Double white. Per 
pkt. 10c. 
514—Roseum Flore Pleno—Double pink. Per pkt. 10c. 
516—Roseum Single Mixed—Per pkt. 5c. 
*ADLUMIA (Allegheny Vine) 
520—Cirrhosa—15 ft. The feathery foliage is like the 
Maidenhair Fern. Delicate rose pink and white flowers 
cover the plant. Per pkt. 10c. 
ADONIS 
523—Vernalis—18 in. May. Large star-shaped yellow 
flowers. Per pkt. 10c. 
AGATHEA 
527—Coelestis (Blue Daisy)—Flowers sky blue with 
yellow disk ; easy growth. Per pkt. 10c. 
AGERATUM 
One of the best of summer flowering plants grown 
from seed. The plants start readily, grow rapidly and 
soon come into bloom, and when they begin to bloom 
they flower uninterruptedly throughout the season. 
During the hot, dry summer months there are no 
brighter or more freely produced flowers. 
534—Album. White. Pkt. 5c. 
537— Blue Perfection—This is the darkest colored 
of all large flowering Ageratums. 9 inches. Pkt. 5c. 
538— AGERATUM, BLUE CAP (New) 
Surpasses Little Dor- 
rit in dwarfness, 
compactness, and in 
the size of the indi¬ 
vidual flowers; it also 
has a deeper and 
richer color. The 
ideal variety for low 
edging of flower 
borders. Pkt. 15c. 
540—Blue Ball—6 in. A charming variety of com¬ 
pact growth, covered with heads of feathery flowers 
of a deep lavender color. Pkt. 5c. 
543—Little Dorrit Blue—One of the best dwarf blue 
ageratums. Pkt. 5c. 
546—Little Silver Star—Is distinguished for its 
compact, close habit. The even, round, cushion-shaped 
plants which are only 4 to 5 inches high, measure 
from 8 to 10 inches across. When flowering they are so 
thickly covered with silver grey star-like flowers that 
the small light green leaves are practically hidden. 
Pkt. 15c. 
AGERATUM 
548— Scarlet Gem—6 in. A charming variety of com¬ 
pact growth, covered with heads of feathery flowers 
of a bright scarlet color. Pkt. 10c. 
549— Finest Mixed—All colors. Pkt. 5c. 
*AGROSTEMMA (Coronaria) 
554—Rose Campion—One of the most attractive of 
the hardy perennials. Blooms the first season from 
seed, producing pretty pink-like blossoms on long 
slender stems. Fine for both mass planting and for 
bouquets. Height about 18 inches. Perennial. Pkt. 10c. 
ALONSOA 
560—Warscewiczi—15 in. A fine plant with bright 
vermilion-scarlet flowers, suitable for bedding. For a 
red, white and blue border plant Alonsoa for red. 
Sweet Alyssum for white and Ageratum Blue Perfec¬ 
tion for blue. Per pkt. 10c. 
ALYSSUM 
A well-known 
favorite, hardy 
annual, blooming 
profusely the entire 
season. Excellent 
for edging. No 
other white flower 
is so well adapted 
for a dense, low 
carpet, or as borders 
and ribbons in garden work. Extremely fragrant and 
frequently used for bouquets. 
565—Little Gem—Very dwarf—4 inches—and spread¬ 
ing. They quickly become one mass of white fragrant 
flowers, remaining in full bloom from spring to fall. 
Per pkt. 10c; oz. 75c 
568—Lilac Queen—Beautiful soft lilac flowers, 
changing to white. Per pkt. 10c; oz. 75c. 
571—Lutescens—Yellowish flowers, 6 inches. Pkt. 10c 
574—Sweet (Maritimum)—This very hardy annual 
for borders, edging or massing in small beds, comes 
into bloom early in the spring, covering itself with 
clusters or trusses of small, pure white cruciform 
flowers. They have a peculiar, delicate fragrance and 
are useful in small bouquets. Usually not over eight 
inches high but spreading. Pkt. 5c; oz. 60c. 
*SAXATILE COMPACTUM 
578—(Basket of Gold)—1 ft. May-June. Producing 
masses of golden flowers very early. May be planted 
effectively with Arabis. Per pkt. 10c; *4 oz. 40c. 
AMARANTHUS 
584—Tricolor—A hardy annual with leaves of red, 
yellow and green; well known as “Joseph’s Coat.” 
Especially brilliant if grown in rather poor soil. 
Per pkt. 10c; oz. 75c 
587—Caudatus—(Love Lies Bleeding)—Blood-red, 
drooping. Per pkt. 10c. 
590—All varieties mixed. Per pkt. 5c. 
*AMPELOPSIS 
Boston Ivy 
592—Veitchii—Rapid-growing climber clinging to 
brick or stone. Dark green, three-lobed leaves which 
turn to crimson in the fall. Pkt. 10c. 
ANAGALLIS 
595—Grandiflora Coerulea—Dark blue, center deep 
purple. 10 inches. Pkt. 10c. 
598—Grandiflora Red—Five-inch, lovely dwarf plant 
of a terra-cotta red for edgings and rockery. Pkt. 10c. 
602—Grandiflora Mixed—6 in. Lovely dwarf plants, 
exceedingly effective as edgings, also charming on 
rock-work and in pots. Pkt. 10c. 
Those Marked ★ are Perennials 
