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GOLDEN AGERATUM AGROSTEMMA 
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ASCLEPIAS 
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TEXANA 
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* ANACYCLUS RADIATUS—ebk(3-4)25. © A pleasant daisy 
from Morocco. The flowers vary from soft primrose to rich 
yellow, the buds and the petal reverses usually shaded with 
rose or bronze, Fern-like foliage. Pkt. 15c. 
* ANAGALLIS MIXED—eiruk(2-4)8. True Pimpernel, a 
pretty little annual for all-summer bloom. Low, undulate 
color, eye-dazzling blue and oriental red. Pkt. 10c. 
1 ANEMARRHENA ASPHODELOIDES—ebkt(3)60. Chinese 
Asphodel-cousin. Decorative sheafs of narrow, glossy foliage. 
Tall racemes of tiny rose-purple flowers in morning-mist 
effect. Pkt. 20c. 
1 ANDROSACE CARNEA BRIGANTICA—ratkt(2)4. Pretty 
little rock garden plant with tufts of deep green foliage and 
loose heads of pure white flowers. Pkt. 20c. 
1 ANDROSACE LANUGINOSA-—Slender, prone stems radiate 
from the crown, each ending in a silvery rosette from which 
rise dense Verbena-like clusters of pretty little rose-colored 
flowers, the whole not much above four inches height. Hardy 
Himalayan for the rock garden. Plants only, each 40c; 3 
for $1.10, 
1 ANCHUSA or ALKANET 
Showy and easy perennials these, some of them even bloom- 
ing first year from seed. ‘X’’ culture. AFFINIS—(2-4) 40. 
Uncurling racemes set with rich violet stars, each with a 
white center. Graceful. Long in bloom. Illustrated page 6. 
Pkt. 10c; 14 oz. 25c; Plants, each 35c; 3 for $1.10. AVALON 
HYBRIDS—Habit, season and culture of the last, but in 
greatly extended color range, giving rose, soft pink with car- 
mine star, cream, primrose, pale blue suffusions, indigo, black- 
violet and the like. Pkt. 20c; 8 pkts. for 50c. ITALICA 
(azurea) DROPMORE SEEDLINGS—(2)45. The largest flow- 
ered. Showy fountains of bright blue blossoms. Pkt. 10c; 
Y% oz. 25e; % oz. 40c. OFFER 16A56—One pkt. each of the 
three for 35c. 
1 ANCHUSA MYOSOTIDIFLORA 
A beauty of the Caucasus that delights in a cool, shady 
corner. Above low masses of big, heart-shaped leaves come 
loose, airy sprays of blossoms in brilliant blue that seem to 
fit most folks’ idea of what a Forgetmenot should look like, 
better than do the flowers of the true Forgetmenot itself. A 
soundly hardy, longlived perennial for rock garden or border, 
for sun or light shade. 10 inches. June. Technically Brun- 
nera macrophylla. Plants only, each 50c; 8 for $1.40; 10 
for $4.35. 
*ANNUAL ANCHUSA 
Two blue beauties to be grown as annuals. No flower easier, 
few bluer. CAPENSIS BLUEBIRD—ebx(3)20. Here are 
blossom constellations in blue of Gentian vividness, each flow- 
erlet with a tiny white center. Long in bloom. Sow much 
of it. Pkt. 10c; % oz. 20c; % oz. 85c. RIPARIA—ecbx (2-4) 34. 
Darker blue than the last, a rich and glowing ultramarine, 
the flowers carried in many graceful fountain sprays. Pkt. 
15e; 3 for 40c. 

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1 ANEMONE or WINDFLOWER 
The Anemones will delight in rock garden or in border, in 
full sun or in light shade. BIFLORA—(2)8. Twin flowers of 
carmine red, or sometimes rosy violet. Kashmir. Pkt. 20c. 
CANADENSIS—(2)15. Big star-blossoms of purest white. A 
hardy and adaptable Windflower of a very considerable attrac- 
tiveness. Pkt. 15c; 1/16 oz. 80c. CAROLINIANA ROSEA— 
(2-8)16. Sheafs of salver-blossoms in pure, deep rose. Long 
in bloom. Pkt. 20c; 8 for 50c. CORONARIA—(1-2)16. There 
are few gayer flowers than this at its best, blossoms of white, 
crimson, scarlet, blue, heliotrope, rose, pink or salmon. Seed- 
lings are usually single, but sometimes semi-double or double. 
Needs winter protection in cold climates, or can be grown as 
a pot bulb. Seeds, pkt. 20c; 3 for 40c. Tubers, available both 
spring and autumn, 4 for 35c; 10 for 70c; 25 for $1.50. CORO- 
NARIA HIS EXCELLENCY—Large single flowers of brightest 
red. Pkt. 20c; DECAPETALA—(2)8. Upfacing flowers that 
may be white, pale blue, or deep blue. An exquisite for the 
rock garden. Pkt. 20c. DELTOIDEA—(2)8. Flowers of 
good size are carried above trifoliate whorls. Blossoms may be 
pure white, or show delicate pink or blue suffusions. Pkt. 
20c. GLOBOSA—(2)20. A rather pretty creamy white. Pkt. 
15e. HALLERI—(2)10. Showy cup-flowers of lilac purple. 
Thrives in full sun. Pkt. 20c; 3 for 50ec. MAGELLANICA— 
(3)16. Soft, creamy yellow, a lovely tone, are the big, upfacing 
flowers. Many are open at once. A highly desirable species. 
Pkt. 20c; 3 for 50c. PATENS NUTTALIANA—(1)12. Pasque 
Flower. Attractive blossom-cups that may be mauve, lilac, 
lavender or violet, always centered with a bunch of butter- 
yellow stamens. It blooms before the leaves. After the flowers 
come decorative seed-plumes. Pkt. 20c; 1/16 oz. 35c. PUL- 
SATILLA—(1-2)16. Great purple cups, centered with golden 
tassels, set in green ruffs. Long-lived, getting larger and 
showier each year. Pkt. 20c; 1/16 oz. 35c. _REGELIANA— 
Consider it a Pulsatilla in rich mulberry maroon. Pkt. 20c. 
RIVULARIS—(3)35. The Great Windflower of India. Giant 
white star-flowers, purple in reverse, are carried on big, 
branching plants. Pkt. 20c. SYLVESTRIS—(2-3)15. The 
pretty Snowdrop Anemone. Perfumed, nodding white flowers. 
Pkt. 20c; 3 for 50c. VITIFOLIA—(4)36. Himalayan Wind- 
flower. Very like the Japanese Anemones, blossoms pale blush 
suffusion, roseflushed in reverse. Blooms in August and Sep- 
tember. Pkt. 20c; 8 pkts. for 50c. OFFER 18A56—One pkt. 
each of the above for $2.50. 
ANEMONE JAPONICA—Great long-stem- 
med blossoms in white, cream, rose or pink, 
a glorious “spring-in-autumn’” flower. 
Blooming starts in late summer, continuing 
well into the fall. _ Illustrated opposite. 
30 inches, “‘yt’ culture. Pkt. 20c; 3 pkts. 
for 50c. Plants also available of four fine 
sorts. QUEEN CHARLOTTE—Big semi- 
double flowers in clear La France pink. 
WHIRLWIND—A very beautiful double 
white. PRINCE HENRY—Double flowers 
in rich, rosy red. Slightly lower and earlier than the two 
previous. SEPTEMBER CHARM—tThe first to flower in this 
group, giving a long season of bloom. Very many single 
blossoms of medium size in soft, silvery pink. UNIFORM 
PRICE—each 60c, 3 of one kind for $1.60; one each of the 
four, marked, for $2.15 
ANEMONE HUPEHENSIS—A free-blooming, early flowering 
Chinese race, growing to about 15 inches, habit upright, neat, 

compact. The blossoms are single, deep pink, but in reverse 
rich rose. Sun or shade. Seeds, pkt. 20c. , Plants, each 60c; 
3 for $1.60 
ANEMONE BLEND—Splendid mixture, above with others. 
Pkt. 20c; 2 pkts. for 50c. 
2 KANGEROO PAW 4 . 
It is ANIGOZANTHOS MANGLESI but in its Australian 
homeland it is called Kangeroo Paw Flower. The blossoms 
are rather decorative, clusters of downy tubes that expand at 
their tips toward starry form, the coloring rich crimson tipped 
with emerald green. The stems are covered with a crimson- 
toned, velvety downiness. Save in mild climates, Anigozanthos 
should be handled as a pot plant. It blooms in summer. Give 
plenty of water then, but very little during the winter. ‘W’’ 
culture. Pkt. 25c. 
Few Americans are very far from the soil, but all Ameri- 
cans would be the better for being a bit closer to it. 

