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. 
HIBISCUS (Marshmallow). Annuals and 
Perennials. Showy, ornamental plants for 
beds or borders. Will bloom first year. 
Trionum. Annual. 2 ft. The 4-inch trum¬ 
pet-shaped blossoms are whitish with a 
suffusion of violet. Flowers in fifteen weeks. 
Pkt. 10 cts., }4oz. 30 cts., oz. $1. 
Golden Bowl. Perennial. 2 ft. Giant yel¬ 
low, cup-like flowers with velvety maroon 
centers, from 6 to 9 inches in diameter. 
Pkt. 10 cts., Moz. 50 cts., oz. $1.50. 
Giant-flowering Type. Perennial. 5 ft. 
Flowers are 6 inches in diameter, trumpet¬ 
shaped, with dark centers. 
Red Pink 
White, with Crimson Eye Mixed 
Each, pkt. 10 cts., 14oz. 30 cts., oz. $1 
HONESTY (Moonwort). Biennial. Ever¬ 
lasting. 2 ft. Purple flowers followed by 
silvery seed-pouches, which are used for 
house ornament. Sow seed in open in May 
and protect over winter—approximately 
the same culture as the English wallflower. 
Pkt. 15 cts., J^oz. 60 cts. 
HORMINUM pyrenaicum. Perennial. 1 ft. 
For the rock-garden or for edging, with 
bluish purple flowers. Pkt. 25 cts., 
5 pkts. $1. 
HOUSTONIA caerulea (Bluets). Perennial. 
6 in. Native plant for the rock-garden, 
with violet, blue, or white flowers, each 
with yellow eye. Pkt. 25 cts., 5 pkts. $1. 
HUMEA elegans. Biennial. 6 ft. For the 
conservatory, porch, or border. Small 
daisy flowers, red or pink, in pendent 
clusters. Pkt. 35 cts., 3 pkts. $1. 
HUMULUS (Japan Hop). Annual Climber. 
Grows 20 to 30 feet in four months. Its 
luxuriant foliage makes it one of the best 
plants for covering verandas, trellises, etc. 
Japonicus. Pkt. 10 cts., 25 cts., 
oz. 75 cts. 
Variegatus. Variegated variety. Pkt. 
10 cts., 34oz. 35 cts., oz. $1.25. 
HUNNEMANNIA (Tulip Poppy; Santa Bar¬ 
bara Poppy). Annual. Sow in the open 
ground around May 1 in the New York 
area, or earlier under glass in pots or on 
upturned turves, transplanting 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., J^oz. 30 cts., oz. $1. 
Sunlite. 2 ft. A semi-double form that 
develops a band of short petals on the out¬ 
side of the tulip-shaped cup, giving it the 
appearance of an open flower at all times. 
The color is a clear canary-yellow. Pkt. 
15 cts., 34oz. 50 cts., oz. $1.50. 
HYPERICUM polyphyllum (St. John’s- 
Wort). Perennial. 4 in. Large, golden 
yellow flowers and almost evergreen foli¬ 
age. For the rock-garden. Pkt. 25 cts. 
Tomentosum. Perennial. 2 ft. Loose 
bouquets of golden star-like blooms. Pkt. 
50 cts., 3 pkts. $1.25. 
IMPATIENS. Greenhouse and Summer Bed¬ 
ding Plants. Desirable pot-plants for the 
greenhouse, also valuable for planting out 
in partial shade. Profuse and continuous 
bloomers. 
Sultani. 1)/^ ft. Flowers are brilliant car¬ 
mine, l }/2 inches in diameter. 
Holsti Hybrids, Mixed. \]/2 ft. Orange, 
scarlet, red, pink, and white flowers that 
measure 1 to inches across. 
Each, pkt. 25 cts., 5 pkts. $1 
Pink Butterfly. See page 11. Pkt. 25 cts., 
5 pkts. $1. 
IPOMOEAS 
Morning-Glories; Convolvulus 
Annual Climbers. For covering 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., MIb. $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. Pkt. 15 cts., J^oz. 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. Sky-blue flowers, 
margined white. Pkt. 10 cts., oz. 50 cts. 
Hederacea grandiflora 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. Pkt. 
10 cts., Oz. 35 cts. 
Heavenly Blue. See page 38. Pkt. 20 cts., 
J^oz. 60 cts., oz. $1, 34Ib. $3.50. 
Scarlett O’Hara. See page 38. Small pkt. 
25c., large pkt. 50c., Hoz. $1.50, oz. $2.50. 
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., 341b. $1.50. 
Royal Ensign. See page 11. Pkt. 35 cts. 
For other varieties of Ipomcea, see Cypress 
Vine and Cardinal Climber 
INCARVILLEA Delavayi. Perennial. 2)4 R- 
Large-leaved plant. The flowers, on long 
stems, are bright rose, tube-shaped, and 
appear almost like gloxinias. June to 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. Perennial. Useful for 
cutting, and effective as a border subject. 
Bright orange-yellow, daisy-like flowers. 
Pkt. 50 cts., 3 pkts. $1.25. 
lONOPSIDIUM acaule (Diamond Flower). 
Annual. Matting plant for the greenhouse, 
or outdoors in a sheltered position. Grows 
only 4 inches, and has white or violet 
flowers. Pkt. 25 cts., 5 pkts. $1. 
JACARANDA mimosifolia. Greenhouse 
Plant. Fern-like leaves and blue flowers in 
panicles. Pkt. 35 cts., 3 pkts. $1. 
KA^NCHOE coccinea. Succulent plant 
with scarlet flowers. Sown in February or 
March, grown in the open during summer, 
and brought inside, it blooms a year after 
sowing. Pkt. 35 cts., 3 pkts. $1. 
KALE, Decorative. Edible vegetable with 
densely curled leaves. Some plants are yel¬ 
low, others golden, purple, red and other 
colors. Pkt. 25 cts., 5 pkts. $1. 
KAULFUSSIA amelloides (Ckarieis). An¬ 
nual. 1 ft. Blue, daisy-flowers %mch 
across. Pkt. 25 cts., 5 pkts. $1. 
KOCHIA trichophylla (Summer Cypress; 
Mexican Firebush). Annual. 234 R- Py¬ 
ramidal bush with feathery, light green foli¬ 
age, deepening as the season advances to a 
crimson hue about September. Pkt. 10 cts., 
34oz- 25 cts., oz. 75 cts. 
Ipomcea, Rose Marie 
Hibiscus 
STUMPP & WALTER CO 
To speed up service with your order, please write questions, 
which we welcome very heartily, on a separate sheet of paper 
Flower Seeds 39 
