THE PITCHER PLANTS 
The Pitcher Plants have leaves like 
oddly hooded, water-holding pitchers or 
urns, decidedly if somewhat bizarrely, 
decorative. Then there are blossoms, 
rather large and quite showy ones. The 
two offered here make excellent pot 
plants. They like a soil that is a mix- 
ture of sand and peat, and they must 
be kept well-watered. An east or north 
window would be their preference. 
Please note that in shipping it is some- 
times necessary to cut back the pitch- 
ers, but new ones will grow quickly. 
Both species are carnivorous. 
SARRACENIA FLAVA—A — showy 
species, with many long, hooded pitch- 
ers of buff-green and red veinings. 
The handsome, pennant-trailing flowers 
of clear lemon yellow may be as much 
as 5 inches across. Makes a splendid 
pot plant, blooming in late winter, but 
it is also winter-hardy in the garden at 
Philadelphia. I/lustrated opposite. Plants, 
each 65c; 3 for $1.85. 
COBRA PLANT—Darlingtonia califor- 
nica. Called Cobra Plant from the 
fantastic, sepentine appearance of the 
leaves, these twisted red-toned pitchers 
with translucent windows. Intricate 
inverted flowers of red-veined  buff- 
brown. Not winter-hardy north, but an 
attractive and unusual pot plant. Each 
$1.00; 3 for $2.90. 

THE KURUME AZALEAS 
This showy group of Japanese Azaleas make easy and beauti- 
ful house plants, blooming freely through late winter and into 
early spring. They are also hardy enough for outdoor planting 
in the climate of Philadelphia and New York, so if you do not 
want to keep them on as pot plants, you can, if you wish make 
a permanent outside planting of them after they have bloomed. 
Seven kinds. PINK PEARL—Early, semi-double, soft pink. 
HINODEGIRI—Vivid scarlet. Exceedingly showy. SNOW-— 
Purest white. Semi-double. CORAL BELLS—Flowers of shell 
pink with hint of coral rose. Semi-double. ORANGE CORAL 
BELLS—Delightful deep pink with suggestion of orange. HEXE 
—Richest crimson. CHARLES ENCKE--Salmon pink with 
white edges. Flowers large. UNIFORM PRICE—FEach 65c; 
3 of a kind for $1.75. AZALEA OFFER—We will send one 
plant each of the seven, with names, for $4.00. 
CLIVIA HYBRIDS 
Here are aristocrats of the Amaryl- 
lis family, to be grown as pot plants. 
From straplike foliage rise stout stems 
crowned with trumpet blossoms from 
softest creamy yellow, through golden 
and burnt orange, to salmon-tinged 
searlet. Illustrated opposite. Leaves are 
wide, heavy, symmetrically arranged, 
and plant is attractive year around. 
Large succulent seeds, per seed 35c; 
3 seeds for $1.00; 8 seeds for $2.10. 
Young plants, about 10 months from 
seed, each 90c; 3 for $2.60. These are 
still well under blooming size, and 
intended for growing on. 

THE PELARGONIUMS 
The Lady Washington or ‘‘Show-and-Fancy’”’ Geranium makes 
a handsome pot plant, the large, pansy-marked flowers appear- 
ing in prodigal abundance. Five sorts. EDITH NORTH~—-Large 
slightly ruffled flowers of salmon pink with rosy tones and 
brown blotch. LAVENDER QUEEN--Soft lavender, with smal! 
purple blotch on each petal. MARY BARD—F lowers pure white. 
but with irregular pink veinings and dottings. AZALEA— 
Large-flowered rosy red, the upper petals with velvety black 
patches. MRS. LAYAL—Flowers very like pansies, white to 
lavender, with face-markings of velvety purple. Blossoms 
medium size, but great numbers of them. UNIFORM PRICE— 
Plants, each 55c. One plant each of the five, for $2.50. 
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