1 ANEMONE or WINDFLOWER 
Anemones will delight in rock garden or in border, in 
full sun or in light shade. “kt” culture. ALBANA—(1-2) 
10. Upfacing flowers of soft yellow, color of homemade ice 
cream on a dairy farm. Pkt. 15¢c. CANADENSIS—(2)15. 
Big star-blossoms of purest white. Hardy; adaptable. Pkt. 
15ec; 7 oz. 80c. CAROLINIANA ROSEA—(2-3)16. Sheafs 
of salver blossoms in pure deep rose. Long in bloom. Pkt. 
15c; 3 pkts. for 40c. CORONARIA ST. BRIGID—(1-2)19 
Few flowers gayer, blossoms of white, crimson, scarlet, 
blue, heliotrope, rose, pink or salmon. Usually semi-double 
or double. Needs protection, North. Pkt. 15c; 3 pkts. for 
40c. (Tubers, usually available both spring and fall, 3 for 
25c; 8 for 50c; 18 for $1.00, large, single-flowered mixed). 
DECAPETALA BLEND—(2)8. Upfacing flowers that may 
be pure white, pale blue or deep blue. Pkt. 15c. DELTO- 
IDEA—(2)8. Flowers of good size are carried above tri- 
foliate whorls. Blossoms may be pure white, or show deli- 
cate pink or blue suffusions. Pkt. 20c. GLOBOSA—(2)20. 
Creamy white. Pkt. 15c. HALLERI—(2)14. Rather showy 
and large cup-flowers of rich, deep purple. Pkt. 15c. 
MAGELLANICA—(-3)16. Big, upfacing flowers of softest 
creamy yellow, many open at once. Highly desirable. Pkt. 
15c; 38 pkts. for 40c. PATENS NUTTALIANA—(1)12. 
Pasque Flower. Showy blossom-cups that may be mauve, 
lilac, lavender or violet, always centered with a bunch of 
butter-yellow stamens. Blooming begins before the leaves 
appear. Decorative silvery seed-plumes. Pkt. 15c; 1% oz. 35c. 
PULSATILLA—(1-2)16. Great purple cups, centered with 
golden tassels, set in green ruffs. Free-blooming. Spectacu- 
lar when established. Pkt. 15c; x oz. 30c. REGELIANA— 
Pretty much a Pulsatilla in rich mulberry-maroon. Pkt. 
lic. RIVULARIS—(3)20. Giant white star-flowers, purple 
in reverse. Pkt. 20c. SYLVESTRIS—(2-3)15. Snowdrop 
Anemone. Perfumed, nodding white flowers. Pkt. 20c. 
VITIFOLIA—(4)36. Great Himalayan Windflower. White, 
flushed lilac-pink. Pkt. 20c. OFFER 20A55—One pkt. each 
of the above for $2.00. 
ANEMONE JAPONICA—Great long-stem- 
med blossoms in white, cream, rose or 
pink, a glorious “‘spring-in-autumn” flow- 
er. Blooming starts in late summer, con- 
tinuing well into the fall. Jllustrated 
opposite. 30 inches. “yt’? culture. Pkt. 
20c; 3 pkts. for 50c. (Plants also avail- 
able of three fine sorts. PURE WHITE— 
Big snowy, single flowers, centered with 
golden stamens. PRINCE HENRY—Semi- 
double salvers of rich, rosy red. QUEEN CHARLOTTE— 
Wide, half-double blossoms of soft pink. UNIFORM 
PRICE, each 50c, or three plants for $1.40.) 
ANEMONE HUPEHENSIS—(3)18. Consider it a desirable 
earlier flowering, lower growing race of Japonica. Charm- 
ing mauve pink blossoms in August and September. Plants 
only, each 45c; 3 for $1.25. 
ANEMONE BLEND—Splendid mixture, above with others. 
Pkt. 15c; 3 pkts. for 40c. 
1 ANEMONELLA THALICTROIDES—rstyt(1-2)9. The airy 
Rue Anemone. Exquisite flowers, snowy white or with 
faint hint of blush, above Maiden-hair Fern foliage. Tol- 
erates sun, likes shade. Pkt. 15c; 3 pkts. for 40c. 

2 KANGAROO PAW 4 
It is ANIGOZANTHOS, but in its Western Australia 
homeland it is called Kangaroo Paw Flower, this from the 
curious shape of the long, hairy blossoms when they are 
in the half-open stage. Anigozanthos grows readily from 
seed. Not truly a bulb, it is bulb-like, with fleshy root 
rhizomes. Save in mild climates, it should be handled as a 
pot plant. It blooms in summer. Give plenty of water then, 
but very little during the winter when it goes into a half- 
rest. “‘w’’? culture. MANGLESI—Clusters of downy tubes 
that expand at tip toward starry form. Brilliant crimson, 
ending in emerald green. Stems covered with crimson down- 
velvet. Pkt. 15c; 3 pkts. for 40c. FLAVIDA—Here the 
flowers are buff-yellow without, white within. Robust. Pkt. 
15e. COCCINEA—Like Flavida, but flowers are red, and 
plants somewhat smaller. Pkt. 20c. 

WINTER PLANT SHIPMENTS — When frost-tender 
plants or bulbs are desired during the period between 
December Ist and April lst, we reserve right to ship 
by express instead of by mail. In such instances any 
postage remittance will be returned or credited. 
AR NSE 
77 

* ANODA or AMAPOLITO 
Quick, long-blooming Annuals of easy growing and a 
high attractiveness. Sow early and you will have blossoms 
by first week of June, continuing then until late autumn 
freezes. It is in late summer and early autumn that it 
reaches its best effect. Anoda lavateroides. 
ANODA OPALCUP—ecbx(8)48. Crinkly, lustrous chalice- 
flowers in that delightful opaline borderland that lies be- 
tween blue and pink. At bright noon you will swear they 
are blue, but let your viewing be at day’s-end, when blos- 
soms glow in long rays of a downing sun, and it is a 
warm and lovely rose pink they will be to you. Pkt. 10c; 
1% oz. 25c. Illustrated above. 
ANODA SNOWCUP—ecbx(8)35. Blossoms of glinting new- 
snow whiteness. Plants grow in even, oval, formal effect, 
as though they had been trimmed into shape. Good as 
spaced specimens, or as a continuous annual hedge. Pkt. 
10c; % oz. 25ce. 
1 LILY OF ST. BERNARD 3 
ANTHERICUM LILIAGO, but the old folk-name for it is 
Lily of St. Bernard. Starry flowers of purest whiteness are 
carried in airy racemes. Pretty always, particularly so when 
massed. For lovely effects in blue and white, plant it with 
Campanula rapunculoides. Fully hardy. and _ long-lived. 
ecbltkt (2-3) 32. Pkt. 15c; 1% oz. 40c. (Plants, each 35c; 
3 for $1.00). Illustrated as Paradisea on page 49. 
You can’t have both freedom and security, for 
freedom is never secure, nor is security ever free. 
On guard,—without and within. 

1 ANTHEMIS KELWAYI—eccbx (2-3) 26. Golden Marguer- 
ite. Branching, fern-leafed plants carry a profusion of 
deep yellow daisy-flowers. Pkt. 10c; % oz. 20c. 
1 ANTHEMIS NOBILIS—rgkt(2)8. Aromatic fern foliage 
of soft green in low, ground-spreading ripples. Little white 
daisies. Useful in rock garden: also valued as a grass sub- 
stitute for lawns in difficult places. Called Lawn Chamo- 
mile. Pkt. 15c; 3 pkts. for 40c. (Plants, little rooted divi- 
sions, mat-spreading rapidly, 20 for $1.00; 100 for $4.00; 
250 for $9.00). : 
1 ANTHYLLIS MIXED—erk(2-3)10. Fluffy appearing heads 
of little tufted pea-flowers in blendings of soft yellow and 
downy red. Pinnate foliage. Pkt. 15c. 
3 ANTIGONON LEPTOPUS—kt(2-4) 30 ft. Rosa de Mon- 
tana or Corallito. A quick vine, dormant in winter but 
growing rapidly in the spring from the root tubers. Heart- 
shaped foliage, garlanded for months with ‘‘Bougainvillea” 
blossoms of bright rose. North, dig and store tubers in 
sand in frostproof place. Pkt. 15c; 44 oz. 85c. 
1 APIOS TUBEROSA—emtk(3). A pretty herbaceous vine 
that grows from an edible tuberous root. Clustered flowers 
in odd chocolate tones, remind in form of Wisteria. Pkt. 
15ce. (Tubers, each 25c; 3 for 65c). 
heb 
