Kill Thousands of Japanese Beetles 
and warn many more away from your plants, with the new BEETLE DUST, 
75 cts. per can. Use it either as a dust or spray. 
THE STATELY HIBISCUS 
Marshmallow 
Perennial. Showy, ornamental plants. 
Will bloom first year from seed if sown early. 
Trionum. The trumpet-shaped blossoms, 
4 inches across, are whitish with a suffusion 
of violet. Flowers in fifteen weeks. 2 ft. 
Pkt. 25 cts., 5 pkts. $1, 3^oz. $2. 
Golden Bowl. Giant yellow, cup-shaped 
flowers with velyety maroon centers, from 
6 to 9 inches in diameter. 2 ft. Pkt. 10 
cts., J^oz. 50 cts., oz. $1.50. 
Giant-flowering Type. Flowers are 6 
inches in diameter, trumpet-shaped, with 
dark centers. 5 ft. 
Red Pink 
White, with Crimson Eye Mixed 
Each, pkt. 10 cts., 14oz. 30 cts., oz. $1 
HOLLYHOCK 
Perennial. One of the most popular of hardy 
garden plants. The beautiful color effects pro¬ 
duced by the planting of these flowers, com¬ 
bined with their dignified and stately appear¬ 
ance, render them indispensable for either the 
old-fashioned garden or the well-planned her¬ 
baceous border. As the plants are affected 
with rust occasionally, we recommend spray¬ 
ing with an approved fungicide. 
Double Orange Prince. The flowers are 
large and of a brilliant apricot-orange hue. 
Gives a beautiful effect in a planting. 
Pkt. 25 cts., Hoz. $1, 34oz. $1.50, oz. $5. 
Double Exquisite. Large blooms are beau¬ 
tifully fringed and frilled or deeply dentate, 
and their colors are charming. They a.e 
so placed on tall spikes that the stiff effect 
noted in older types is lacking. Mixed. 
A fine selection of colors. Pkt. 25 cts., 
Hoz. $1, 34oz. $1.50, oz. $5. 
Chaier*s Superb Double 
Chamois 
Deep Rose 
Maroon 
Newport Pink 
Pure White 
Salmon-Rose 
Scarlet 
Sulphur-Yellow 
Superb Mixed 
Each, pkt. 15 cts., 2 pkts. 25 cts., Vtoz. 60 cts., 
OZ. $2 
S. & W. Co.’s Double Mixed. An excellent 
strain. Selected with great care from the 
strongest plants and brightest colors. Pkt. 
15 cts., }^oz. 50 cts., oz. $1.50. 
S. & W. Co.*s Superb Single 
Apricot Pink White 
Chamois Rose Yellow 
Maroon Scarlet Mixed 
Mauve 
Each, pkt. 10 cts., V^oz. 35 cts., oz. $1.25 
Annual Hollyhock, Indian Spring. See 
illustration, page 9. Pkt. 35 cts., 3 pkts. $1. 
_ HONESTY (Moonworf) _ 
Biennial. Everlasting. Purple flowers fol¬ 
lowed by silvery seed-pouches, which are 
used for house ornament. Sow seed in open 
in May and protect over winter—approxi¬ 
mately the same culture as the English wall¬ 
flower. 2 ft. Pkt. 15 cts., Moz. 60 cts. 
HYPERICUM (5*/. John’s-Wort) 
Polyphyllum. Perennial. Large, golden 
yellow flowers and almost evergreen foliage. 
For the rock-garden. 4 in. Pkt. 25 cts. 
Tomentosum. Perennial. Loose bouquets 
of golden star-like blooms. 2 ft. Pkt. 
50 cts., 3 pkts. $1.25. 
THE TWINING HUMULUS 
Japan Hop 
Annual Climber. Grows 20 to 30 feet high 
in four months. Its luxuriant foliage makes 
it one of the best plants for covering verandas, 
trellises, etc. Heat, drought, and insects do 
not trouble it. 
Japonicus. Pkt. 10c., Moz. 25c., oz. 75c. 
Variegatus. Variegated variety. Pkt. 10 
cts., Moz. 35 cts., oz. $1.25. 
HUNNEMANNIA 
Tulip Poppy; Santa Barbara Poppy; 
Bush Eschscholtzia 
Annual. Sow in the open ground around 
May 1 in the New York area, or earlier under 
glass in pots or on upturned turves, trans¬ 
planting these when danger of frost is over. A 
sunny position in a well-drained border suits it. 
Fumariaefolia. Large, buttercup-yellow, 
poppy-like blossoms. The plants grow 
about 2 feet high, are quite bushy, with 
beautiful, feathery, glaucous foliage. Pkt. 
10 cts., 34oz- 30 cts., oz. $1. 
Sunlite. A semi-double form that develops 
a band of short petals on the outside of 
the tulip-shaped cup. This adds to the 
size of the flower and makes it more at¬ 
tractive, giving it the appearance of an 
open flower at all times. The color is a 
clear canary-yellow. 2 ft. Pkt. 15 cts., 
}4oz. 50 cts., oz. $1.50. 
HYACINTH BEAN. See Dolichos. 
IBERIS. See Candytuft. 
IPOMOEAS 
Morning-Glories; Convolvulus 
Annual Climbers. Rapid-growing vines 
with beautiful and varied flowers. For cover¬ 
ing walls, trellises, arbors, or stumps of trees. 
Mixed Imperial Japanese (Emperor Morn¬ 
ing-Glory). May be sown in the open 
ground in a sunny situation when the 
weather has become warm. Flowers are 
of gigantic size and their colorings beyond 
description. Pkt. 10c., oz. 35c., Mlb. $1.25. 
Tall or Climbing Convolvulus, Mixed. 
Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 30 cts. 
Dwarf Bedding Convolvulus, Mixed. Pkt. 
10 cts., oz. 30 cts. 
Rose Marie. Rose-pink, double and semi¬ 
double flowers. A fitting companion to the 
Heavenly Blue, described below. Pkt. 
15 cts., Hoz. 40 cts., oz. 75 cts. 
Bona-nox (Evening-Glory). Rosy lilac 
flowers, expanding in the evening. Very 
rapid grower. Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 30 cts. 
Hederacea grandiflora superba. Sky-blue, 
margined white. Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 50 cts. 
Hederacea grandiflora superba alba. 
White. Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 50 cts. 
Leari. Dark blue. Pkt. 25 cts., 5 pkts. $1. 
Mexicana alba (Moonflower). At night and 
during dull days the plants are covered 
with an abundance of large, pure white 
flowers having a delicate fragrance. It 
grows rapidly and will quickly cover a 
large surface. Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 35 cts. 
Heavenly Blue, Improved (Ipomaea rubro- 
caeruha). See page 9. Pkt. 20 cts., J^oz. 
60 cts., oz. $1, }4^b. $3.50. 
Scarlett O’Hara. See page 8. Small pkt. 
25c., large pkt. 50c., J^oz. $2.50, oz. $4.50. 
Setosa (Brazilian Morning-Glory). Flowers 
of pleasing rose-color, borne very freely in 
large clusters from August to frost. Pkt. 
15 cts., oz. 50 cts., }ilb. $1.50. 
For other varieties of Ipomoea, see Cypress 
Vine and Cardinal Climber 
_IMPATIENS_ 
Greenhouse and Summer Bedding Plants. 
Desirable pot-plants for the greenhouse, also 
valuable for planting out in partial shade. 
Profuse and continuous bloomers. 
Sultani. Flowers are brilliant carmine, IJ^ 
inches in diameter. IJ^ ft. 
Holsti Hybrids. Orange, scarlet, red, pink, 
and white flowers that measure 1)4 to 
1 inches across. Mixed. 1 Yi ft. 
Each, pkt. 25 cts., 5 pkts. $1 
Pink Butterfly. See page 8. Pkt. 35 cts., 
3 pkts. $1. 
INCARVILLEA 
Delavayi. Perennial. Large-leaved plant. 
The flowers, on long stems, are bright rose, 
tube-shaped, and appear almost like 
gloxinias. 2Yi ft. June-Aug. 
Variabilis Hybrids. Perennial. The tube¬ 
shaped flowers are white and various 
shades of pink and yellow. 
Each, pkt. 25 cts., 5 pkts. $1 
INULA Royleana. Useful perennial plant 
for cutting, and effective as a border sub¬ 
ject. Bright orange-yellow, daisy-like 
flowers. Pkt. 50 cts., 3 pkts. $1.25. 
JOHNNY-JUMP-UPS. See Viola. 
Double Hollyhocks 
_ KALANCHOE 
Coccinea. Greenhouse Plant. Succulent 
plant, recommended for the greenhouse 
because of its long blooming period and its 
bright scarlet color. Sown in February or 
March, grown in the open during summer, 
and again brought inside, it will bloom a 
year after sowing. Pkt. 35 cts., 3 pkts. $1. 
_ KOCHIA _ 
Summer Cypress; Mexican Firehush 
Trichophylla. Annual. A perfect pyrami¬ 
dal bush with small, feathery, light green 
foliage, deepening as the season advances 
to a crimson hue about September. 2)4 ft- 
Pkt. 10 cts., 34oz. 25 cts., oz. 75 cts. 
LANTERN PLANT. See Physalis. 
Flower Seeds 
31 
STUMPP & WALTER CO., NEW YORK CITY 
