




Give 
FUCHIAS or 
TUBEROUS 
BEGONIAS 
for 
Birthdays 
Anniversaries 
Mother’s Day 
Easter 
Father’s Day 
Christmas 
= CgRTIFICATE 
We send 
HAND PAINTED GIFT CARDS 
to the recipient of your gift, for an additional 50c with every pur- 
chase of a $5.00 present in plants. 
When ordering suggest the Fuchsia or Tuberous Begonia you would 
like painted; it will be reproduced in water color if it is possible 
at the time. 
FUCHSIA SPECIES 

BACILLARIS (Mexico). Cherry red, very 
small flowers with flaring mouth. Com- 
pact grower. 
BOLIVIANA (Bolivia). Standing more sun 
and heat, tall growing, free blooming over 
the summer, with clusters of long thin 
flowers of scarlet red. 
CORYMBIFLORA (Peru). Tall growing 
with clusters of coral red thin flowers. 
Very large grey-green leaves. 
CORYMBIFLORA ALBA (Peru). Tall 
growing like preceding with long, thin 
white tube and sepals, short deep red 
corolla. 
FULGENS (Mexico). Large, hairy light 
green leaves, with orange vermillion co- 
rolla, orange-pink tube with green tipped 
Sepals. 
ISIS (Mexico). Medium height, with smal] 
glossy blue-green foliage, masses of tiny 
bright crimson flowers. 
MACROSTEMMA ALBA (Chile). Tall up- 
right growing variety with small leaves 
and small blooms of almost pure white in 
both corolla and sepals. Has the faintest 
lilac flush to the flower; will grow to 
twenty feet in proper conditions, never 
without blooms. Very hardy. 
MAGELLANICA (Peru). Strong growing, 
almost climbing. Short purple petals, red 
sepals. The most common fuchsia and one 
of the most hardy. 
MAGELLANICA GRACILIS (Peru and 
Chile). Strong growing, small narrow 
leaves and small thin flowers with narrow 
red sepals and short purple corolla. Hardy. 
MAGELLANICA PUMILA (Peru). The 
smallest flowered of the Magellanicas. 
Tiny red and purple drops. Will grow very 
tall and viney next to a building. Hardy. 
SERRATIFOLIA (Peru and Chile). Long 
tube tinted carmine, shading to green at 
tips of sepals, deep orange pink corolla. 
One of nature’s unusual and daring color 
combinations. 
THYMFOLIA (Mexico). Minute flowers 
in profusion with tiny crimson sepals and 
petals. Tube of lighter shade. Prominent 
while stamens. One of the smallest flow- 
ers of the group. 
PROCUMBENS (New Zealand). A trailing 
variety with tiny leaves and short orange 
tube with reflexed purple sepals, no co- 
rolla. Blue stamens. Fine for the rock gar- 
den in the shade. Red fruit. 
