
Fuchsia 4 
Standards or Tree Types 
Purple Prince. (SglI.) One of the old stand-bys. 
Sepals are crimson-red with purple corolla. 
Display. (Sgl.) These blossoms have broad, open 
petals of deep rosy pink set upon clear pink sepals. 
Mrs. Rundle. (Sgl.) Blossom has a long tube with 
very long sepals of warm apricot-salmon and a 
vivid orange corolla. 
Espalier Type 
Brilliant. (Sgl.) Scarlet sepals; violet corolla. 
Hanging or Trailing Types 
Marinka. (Sgl.) Rosy scarlet corolla and crimson- 
scarlet sepals. 
Cascade. (Sgl.) The buds are extremely long and 
are a bright watermelon-red. When open they 
form the sepals which have a spread from tip to 
top of from 5 to 6 inches. The corolla is rosy pink 
with maroon stamens and yellow pistil. 
Balkan. (Sgl.) Soft pastel green foliage makes an 
ideal background for the medium-sized pink 
flowers whose sepals are light pink with bright 
pink corolla. 
Hallowe’en. (Sgl.) Very large flowers with corolla 
light plum; sepals white flushed pmk. 
Pasteur. (DbI.) Very double red and white flowers, 
corolla white and sepals clear red. 
Elsa. (DbI.) Rosy purple corolla and tube; sepals 
wax-white flushed rose-pink. 
PRICE OF ALL FUCHSIAS: 3-in. pot-grown 
plants, 25c. each. 4-in. pot-grown plants, 35c. 
each. 8-in. tree or standards, $1.50 to $5.00. 
HELIOTROPE, Royal Fragrance 
This is another old plant that has lost favor be- 
cause people planted it in the sun, but is now rapidly 
coming Into Its own again when planted in partial 
shade. 
As long as Tuberous-rooted Begonias have no 
odor nor blue shades in their color-range, we sug- 
gest using a few Heliotrope, Royal Fragrance (the 
most sweet-scented and darkest blue) planted in 
the same bed to give the contrasting blue and the 
sweet Heliotrope odor. 
Truly one of the old favorites that still can’t be 
beat if planted in partial shade. 
Prices: 21%-in. pot-grown plants, 10c. each, 
$1.00 per doz. 4-in. pot-grown plants, 35c. each, 
and some larger sizes at proportionate prices. 

FUCHSIA 
Another Shade-Loving Plant 
There ts no more satisfactory shrubby 
plant for the partially shaded area of your 
garden than the Fuchsia. It may be 
grown in every state of the Union. 
Many varieties bloom continuously 
from early spring until late fall. With its 
almost endless variety of types and forms, 
its single and double flowers ranging in 
size from that of a tiny lilac blossom to 
flowers 5 inches long, and a color-range 
from white through the entire gamut to 
violet, it is little wonder that again it Is 
fast coming into its own. 
We have a collection of over one hun- 
dred varieties, some the tiny dwarf type 
and some that form regular trees; others 
have trailing or climbing characteristics 
that can be used against a wall, on a trellis, 
or in hanging-baskets and porch-boxes: 
while some can be used as a hedge back- 
ground for the Tuberous-rooted Begonia 
bed. Space does not permit a full listing at this 
time so will describe a few with the different 
characteristics. 
Bedding Types 
of Medium-Size Growth 
Brentwood. (DbI.) The long-awaited all-white 
double Fuchsia. 
Chief. (DbI.) The enormous double flowers are a 
rich dark violet with some of the petals blushed 
cerise; the dark carmine sepals offer a fine con- 
trast. 
Dollar Princess. (DbI.) Dainty rosy purple and 
scarlet blooms literally cover the compact, bushy 
plants. 
Erecta Novelty. (Sgl.) Contrary to the rule govern- 
ing all other Fuchsias, the flowers stand erect 
instead of hanging down. The color is a delightful 
combination of red, white, and pink. 
Little Beauty. (Sgl.) Dwarf, compact plant. Lav- 
ender-blue corolla changing to rosy lavender; 
deep pink sepals. 
Amy Lye. (Sgl.) Strong, compact grower, profuse 
bloomer. Single flowers of coral-orange with 
waxy white sepals. 

