5 ANODA or AMAPOLITO 
Quick, long-blooming Annual of easy 
growing and a high attractiveness. Sow 
early and you will have blossoms by 
first week of June, continuing then until 
late autumn freezes. Anoda lavateroides. 
ANODA OPALCUP—ecbx(8) 48. Crinkly 
lustrous chalice-flowers in that delight- 
ful opaline borderland that lies between 
blue and pink. Pkt. 15c; % oz. 25ce; 
Y%/oz. 5c. 
ANODA SNOWCUP—ecbx(8)35. Blos- 
soms of glinting new-snow whiteness. 
Plants grow in even, oval, formal effect, 
as though they had been trimmed into 
shape. Pkt. 15e; % oz. 25¢e; ™%4 oz. 40c. 
OPALCUP 
1 ANEMONE or WINDFLOWER 
The Anemones will delight in rock garden or in border, in 
full sun or in light shade. ‘‘kt’’ culture. 
ALPINA—(1-2)6. The flowers may be snowy white, creamy, 
or primrose to near lemon yellow, for we include seeds of 
A. sulfurea, now considered a color variety of A. alpina. 
Foliage fernlike. Pkt. 20c; 46 oz. 35c; % oz. 55c; % oz. $1.00. 
BLANDA—(1)7. Grecian Windflower. It blooms at first breath 
of spring, tufted foliage mounds set profusely with wide- 
rayed starry flowers in the most brilliant and startling of 
blues. Illustrated below. Pkt. 25c. 
CANADENSIS—(2)16. A handsome and adaptable, fully 
hardy Windflower, giving a long spring showing of its up- 
facing flowers in the purest of whites. Thrives in either full 
sun or open shade. Everyone likes this Anemone. Pkt. 20c. 
Plants, each 55c; 8 for $1.35; 10 for $3.85. 
CAROLINIANA ROSEA—(38)12. Upfacing sheafs of pretty 
little rose-colored blossoms. Pkt. 25c. 
CORONARIA—(1-2)12. There are few gayer 
flowers than this, blossoms of vivid scarlet, 
brilliant blue, heliotrope, rose, pink, sal- 
mon, crimson, white. Large single blooms. 
Needs protection in cold climates, or can 
be grown as a pot bulb. Pkt. 15c; Ye oz. 
80c; % oz. 50c. Tubers, either spring or 
fall, 10 for 75c; 25 for $1.60. 
CORONARIA ST. BRIGID—Seedlings of 
this strain are likely to have large double 
flowers. Same fine color range, same habits 
as the last. Pkt. 20; 8 pkts. for 50c. 
Tubers, fall and spring, 10 for 85c; 25 
for $1.95. 
MAGELLANICA—(38)15. Handsome summer-bloomer with up- 
facing flowers of creamy yellow. Long-lived; long blooming. 
Pkt. 20c; 3 pkts. for 50c. Plants, each 55c; 3 for $1.40. 
LITHOPHILA—(2)8. Rare alpine with silky foliage and 
upfacing flowers, creamy with blue suffusions. Pkt. 25c. 
NARCISSIFLORA—(2-3)18. Massed loveliness of clustered 
blossoms, usually of purest white, but again with faint color 
suffusions. Pkt. 15c; Weg oz. 30c; % oz. 50c. 
POLYANTHES—(2)12. The pretty blossoms, usually of blush- 
suffused white, but sometimes deeper on petal reverse, are 
carried in many-flowered clusters. Pkt. 25c. 
PULSATILLA—rbkt(1-2)15. A handsome species of fullest 
enduring hardiness. Great purple cups, centered with golden 
tassels, set in green ruffs. Long-lived, getting better and 
_ showier year by year. Pkt. 20c; 46 oz. 35c. Plants, each 55c; 
8 for $1.40. 
RIVULARIS—tTallest of Windflowers, the diffusely branch- 
ing plants rising to fifty inches or more. Big, starry flowers, 
white above and purple below, are carried in profusion 
through late summer and into early autumn. Of full winter 
hardiness at our nursery. Pkt. 20c; 3 pkts. for 50c. 
SYLVESTRIS—(2-3)15. The lovely Snowdrop Anemone. Per- 
fumed, nodding flowers, long in bloom. Shade-tolerant, but 
with straw about the roots to keep the soil cool, it will thrive 
in sun, too. Pkt. 20c. Plants, each 55c; 8 for $1.40. 
VITIFOLIA—(4)36. Himalayan Windflower. Large pink- 
suffused flowers, rosy in reverse. Related to A. japonica, but 
blooms much earlier, and has great hardiness. Pkt. 20c. 
OFFER 719A—One pkt. each of the 14 for $2.55. 
ANEMONE BLEND—Splendid mixture, most of those here, 
with others. Pkt. 20c; 8 pkts. for 50c; 10 pkts. for $1.65. 
[19] 
1 THE JAPANESE ANEMONES 
A glorious ‘‘spring-in-autumn”’ flower. Great long-stemmed 
blossoms. Blooming starts in late summer, contjnuing well 
into autumn. Illustrated below. Height about 30 inches. 
QUEEN CHARLOTTE—Big, semi-double flowers in clear La 
France pink. Plants, each 65c; 3 for $1.60. 
MARIE MANCHARD—A snowy beauty. Semi-double flowers 
of purest white. Plants, each 65c; 3 for $1.60. 
ALICE—A vigorous, showy sort with 
large, single flowers of rose pink. Plants, 
each 65c; 3 for $1.60. 
HUPEHENSIS—(3)15. A lower (to 15 
inches) Chinese Anemone that is particu- 
larly early blooming. The compact plants 
are upright, becoming sheafs of flowers 
from late August into October. The blos- 
soms are bright pink above, rich rose in 
reverse. Pkt. 20c. Plants, each 65c; 3 for $1.60. 
Bs | 
OFFER 719BN—One plant each of the 4 for $2.45. 
ANEMONE JAPONICA MIXED—~yt. Saved from named 
sorts and varied colors. Sow seed in late autumn in outdoor 
beds or flats, or otherwise in earliest spring. Pkt. 20c; 4g oz. 
60c. Plants, mixed only, each 55c; 3 for $1.40: 
1 DAINTY RUE ANEMONE 
It is Anemonella thalictroides, the airy Rue Anemone of 
woodland edges. Exquisite flowers, snowy white or with faint 
hint of blush, above Maidenhair Fern foliage. Pkt. 25c; 3 pkts. 
for 70c; 10 pkts. for $2.00. 
3 GAY ANOMATHECA 
A pretty and easy bulb-flower that blooms within a few 
months from seed. The blossoms are soft rosy red with maroon 
markings at the petal bases. May be grown in the summer 
garden, blooming in summer, and on into early autumn. Also 
may be forced readily in pots for winter bloom, by giving 
Freesia treatment. Botanically it is now classified as LAPEI- 
Aa ees CRUENTA. ew(7-1). Pkt. 25c. Bulbs, 3 for 50c; 7 
or $1.00. 
2 
2 THE ANGELON 
A showy large pot plant particularly 
suited to sun porch or greenhouse, though 
it may be grown effectively in the window 
garden also, or in summer, plunged in the 
outdoor border. Great racemes of handsome, 
bright blue flowers, formed in face sug- 
gestion, are carried for months above the 
light green, apple-scented foliage. TIllus- 
trated opposite. It is ANGELONIA SALI- 
CARIAEFOLIA, but usually called the 
Angelon. Plants only, each 65c; 3 for $1.75. 
1 ROCK GARDEN TREASURE 
A dainty beauty to fit rocks and ledges, 
or a wall cranny, is ANDROSACE LAN- 
UGINOSA, a lovely, fully winter hardy 
cousin of Primula. The plants are clusters 
of dense rosettes that seem to be ‘of pure 
silver, with new rosettes adventuring here 
and there at the ends of long, slender runners. From the 
rosettes rise many Verbena-like clusters of pretty little rose- 
colored flowers, the whole not above 4 inches of height. It 
likes full sun. Plants only, each 55c; 3 for $1.40. 
1 ANTHEMIS 
BEIBERSTEINIANA— (2-3) 12. Above low foliage that might 
be silver filigree sprinkled with diamond dust, rise blossoms 
of orange-gold, each on its own slender stem. Definitely one 
of the more desirable, as it is also one of the rarer, of rock 
garden plants. Pkt. 25c. Plants, each 60c; 3 for $1.50; 10 for 
$4.25. 
MONTANA—erx(3)10. Rather good mounded white flowers 
above silky, silvery, fern-cut foliage. Pkt. 20c; 3 for pkts. 
for 50c. 
SANCTA-JOHANNIS—cbx(8)30. St. John’s Daisy. Showy 
border perennial that often blooms first year from seed. Many 
large daisy-flowers in rich, golden orange. Pkt. 20c; 4¢ oz. 35c. 
KELWAYI—ecbx (2-3)25. The Hardy Golden Marguerite. The 
branching, aromatic, fine-leafed plants are loaded with big, 
golden daisies from July well into autumn. Pkt. 15c; % oz. 
40c; % oz. 75c; 1 oz. $2.25. 
