PURPLE SAGE— 1951 introduction. Single 
saucer-shaped deep purple corolla opens 
flat as the medium sized flowers mature, 
displaying extra long red stamens and 
pistil. Recurved deep red sepals. Medium 
grower with dark leaves. Blooms very 
freely and stands up well even here in 
warm Palo Alto. 20c. 
RED SPIDER—Color much like Butterfly, but 
slight violet undertone. Good trailing 
habit, stands warmer climate. Sheets of 
flowers with long spreading sepals. Abso- 
lutely tops. 
RED WING—Single corolla purple and red, 
long pointed wide-spreading sepals red 
17}/2c, 
RUTHIE (Brand)—1951 introduction. Double, 
intense violet blue, small outside petals 
fuchsia pink. Short, broad sepals white, 
flushed pink on underside. Medium sized 
flowers, free blooming. 20c. 
SAN FRANCISCO — Single geranium lake, 
thick tube and long sepals pale carmine. 
Strong grower. A very fine orange variety. 
SAN MATEO—Double, deepest violet, 
splashed fuchsia pink. Sepals rosy red. 
Very large informal corolla, the most popu- 
lar giant-flowered hanger. 17}/,c. 
SAN PABLO—A sport of San Mateo, identical 
in growth and size of flowers except for its 
more trailing habit and the orchid color of 
the corolla, with rose pink sepals. One of 
the finest ever introduced. 17}/2c. 
SCOTTY—Double violet blue, sepals pink. 
Large flowers. 20c. 
SNOWFLAKE — 1951 introduction. Single 
white bell-shaped corolla, upcurled sepals 
white. Strong grower with dark green foli- 
age, easy to grow, free blooming. Heat 
resistant. 20c. 
STREAMLINER (Patent pending)—1951 in- 
troduction. Everything about this great 
fuchsia is streamlined—the long slender 
buds, long thin tube, long semi-double 
corolla, extra long twisted and curved se- 
pals, and even the strong growth stream- 
lines directly down from the hanging pot. 
Similar in coloring to “Red Spider,” but 
deeper colored in both corolla and sepals. 
Streamliner loves the warmer climate and 
has produced sheets of blooms wherever 
grown last season. 35c. (Minimum retail 
price for 1952 is $1.00 each. 
You can propagate your own STREAM- 
LINER in 1952. Please read how to go 
about it, on the yellow sheet enclosed in 
this catalogue. Patent labels of STREAM- 
LINER available from us at 10¢ each. 
SWEETHEART—Double corolla with center 
petals lavender blue; large outer petals 
fuchsia pink and some marbled with blue; 
long, broad, recurved pink sepals. Wil- 
lowy grower with big buds and large flow- 
ers. Sweetheart is in the always popular 
soft colors. 20c. 
SWINGTIME—Double corolla milky white, 
tube and short, upturned sepals shiny red. 
Good grower of branching habit, early and 
free blooming, with large flowers having 
a prominent, spreading corolla. One of the 
top hanging basket fuchsias, as Swingtime 
likes the warmer climate and performs 
equally well in the cooler sections. 20c. 
TRAIL BLAZER (Patented) — 1951 introduc- 
tion. Best described as a double RED SPI- 
DER, with sepals a little paler in color. 
This is a real trailer, with branches hang- 
ing directly down the sides of the basket. 
Under license with the patentee we grow 
our own plants of Trail Blazer. 35¢e. (Mini- 
mum retail price for 1952 is $1.00 each.) 
WILLIAM BRAAS—1951 introduction. Double 
corolla rose madder; upturned sepals 
white. flushed palest pink. A real hanger, 
may be best described as a large, darker 
and fully double “Cascade.” 20c. 
OTHER FUCHSIAS USEFUL FOR HANGING POTS 
Described or listed and priced on preceding pages, the following varieties have been grown 
successfully in hanging baskets, specially those printed in heavy type: 
Abundance, America, Aunt Juliana, Aurora Superba, Clair de Lune, Columbia, Don Peralta, 
Du Barry, Enchanted, Flirtation, Flying Cloud, Formosissima, Gay Senorita, Hesitation, Jack 
Shahan, La Bianca, Lucky Strike, Maxine Elizabeth, Moth Blue, Old Smoky, Pan America, 
Patty Evans, Purple Heart, Seventeen, Souvenir de H. Henkel, Super British, The Dowager, 
Titanic, Uncle Charley, Uncle Jules, Utopia and Whitemost. 
