SINGLE FLOWERED FUCHSIAS—Continued 
PURPLE SAGE (Hodges) — Single saucer 
shaped deep purple corolla opening per- 
fectly flat with recurved deep red sepals. 
Medium grower and may be used as 
trailer. 75c each. 
RED SAILS—Double soft pink; long and 
broad sepals deep red. Sepals twist and 
curl in peculiar fashion, exposing the 
large corolla. Strong, willowy grower. 
RED SPIDER (Reiter Sr.)—Spidery flowers 
have a long tube and exceedingly long 
narrow sepals of deepest crimson and 
long pointing petals of deep rose madder 
veined and margined deep crimson. A 
very good trailer. 
REFLEXUS—Small bushy plant with tiny 
flowers of orange scarlet and reflexed 
red sepals. 
ROSE OF DENMARK—One of 
the best with corolla of pale 
rose shading to deeper rose 
at edge of petals, reflexed 
pale blush sepals. 
SAN FRANCISCO (Reiter, Sr.) 
—See page 7. 
SERAPHINE—Large single 
wide spread corolla of dark 
cyclamen purple and upright 
sepals of deep pink. Distinct. 
SERRATIFOLIA—Peru and 
Chile. Long tube white tinted 
carmine shading to green at 
tips of sepals, deep orange 
pink corolla shading to car- 
mine at base. 
SOUTH PACIFIC (Hodges) — 
Large saucer shaped single 
corolla of white petals veined 
deep pink, opening perfectly 
flat, broad upturned crimson 
sepals. Upright bushy grower. 
STARGAZER (Reiter Jr.) — 
Small bushy plant with up- 
right flowers. The tube and 
sepals are pale rose madder 
and petals are rose madder 
heavily margined and mar- 
bled at their base with Im- 
perial purple. An excellent 
pot plant. 
x 
SUEY HO—Single white corolla with rose 
veins at base, white green tipped sepals 
flushed rose. Dwarf. 
SUMMER SKIES (Niederholzer)—A single 
medium sized flower with corolla of clear 
pale silver blue. Tube and upturned 
sepals of pale rose. A good continuous 
bloomer of medium growth. 75c each. 
SUNRAY—Ornamental variegated foliage, 
silvery white and green. Rosy purple co- 
rolla and salmon sepals. 
SUNSET (Niederholzer)—Single open sau- 
cer shaped flowers of deep salmon 
orange. 
San Francisco (See Page 7) 
