IULE | Everybody’s Flower 
PETUNIAS 
Grow them in pots, porch or patio boxes; enjoy them in little beds, big beds, long 
beds; plant them along fences, drive »ways or paths: use them in tree stumps, wagon 
wheels or wheelbarrows. No matter what the use, there is a Petunia to fit. 
Why? Because they grow “most anywhere.’ except in dense shade, and are not 
fussy as to soil. Because there are compact, mound-like varieties only 9 inches high, 
all the way to semi-trailing forms 4 to 5 feet long. Because they are covered with 
flowers from 11% to 6 inches in diameter. Because you can have colors in almost any 
conceivable shade of white, pink, rose, crimson, blue and vourple, even’a deep cream that 
passes for yellow. Choose the Petunias that suit your purpose. Enjoy their jaunty 
beauty from June to heavy frost. 
Prize-winning All-double Petunias 
Mrs. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Alldouble, 3419. Silver Medal Winner, 1947. Lu- 
minous salmon, lightly veined with deeper salmon. Pkt. $2.00; 2 pkts. $3.75. 
Rose Marie, Alldouble, 3421. Bronze Medal Winner, 1947. A beautiful clear rose- 
pink, exquisitely veined with deeper rose. Pkt. $1.00. 
Orchid Beauty, Alldouble, 3422. Orchid flow ers, 7 ERP ruffled and fully double. 
Individual blooms are 4 to rey sinches across. Pkt. $1.50. 
Colossal Shades of Rose, Alldouble, 3416. ae er Medal’ Winner, 1946. Over 5 
inches across. Delightful shades from salmon-pink to rose-pink. Pkt. $1.00; 3 pkts. 
$2.75. 
America, Alldouble, 3412. Compact plants with 214-inch flowers of sparkling rose- 
pink. Pkt. 50c; large pkt. $2.25. 
WINS THE GOLD MEDAL, ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS 
Brilliant, startling firecracker-red—a mound of fire 
when in full bloom. Dwarf, compact plants for beds, bor- 
ders or boxes. No wonder it was the unanimous choice 
of twenty judges and the first Gold Medal Winner in 11 
years. 
America’s Favorite 
House Plant 
You will find more African 
Violets on window sills than 
any other flower. Most of these 
have been raised from leaf cut- 
tings, since seed has been un- 
obtainable. 
This year we have seed from 
a famous European grower, 
and we feel there are endless 
possibilities for raising new 
varieties from this stock. Grow 
your own—1038. Pkt. 75c; 
3 pkts. $2.00. 
For complete success buy 
the most authoritative book on 
the subject: The African Vio- 
let, by Helen Van Pelt Wilson. 
$2.75, postpaid. 
3336 Pkts. only, 25¢ 
WIK-FED-POTS 
Self watering, self draining. 
Ideal for African Violets. 4 
in. $1.15 each; 2 for $2.00, 
postpaid. 
Petunia, Snowstorm Improved 
Single Dwarf Giants of California 
A magnificent strain with flowers measuring 4 to 6 inches across, beautifully 
ruffled and fringed. 18 in. 
Crimson. Glory, 3391. Brilliant carmine-red with contrasting deeper veins. 
Glamour, 3400. Huge salmon-rose with cream throat. 
Salmon-Rose Shades, 3393. A delightful blend of choicest salmon-rose shades. 
Any of the above: Pkt. 50c; large pkt. $1.25 
Dwarf Giants of California Mixed, 3394. Short stoc ky plants with huge 
fringed flowers. Solid colors, many with intriguing veining. Pkt. 50c; large 
pkt. $1.50. 
Single Large Flowering 
Hybrida Grandiflora— Plain- edged hat huge flowers. 
Burgundy, 3364. Deep burgundy-red with. purple-veined white throat. Pkt. 
25c; large pkt. 75c. 
Dwarf Elk’s Pride, 3366. Bears a great profusion of velvety, deep purple 
blooms. Very dwarf and c ompact. Pkt. 25c; large pkt. 75c. 
Elk’s Pride, 3365. L sarge, well-formed blooms of brilliant rich purple-blue. 
Bright foliage. Pkt. ; large pkt. 75c. 
Snowstorm raproveds 3368. Covered with well-formed, pure white flowers. 
Pkt. 25c: large pkt. 75c. 
The last two are fine in combinations in porch or patio boxes. Gold-Medai Petunia, Fire Chief 
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