Scarlet Runner Bean A. 



873. Phaseolus COCCineus. A rapid-growing vine with sprays of 

 brilliant red flowers like pea blossoms. 1-oz. pkt. 25c. 



Statice A. 



897. Sinuata, Choice Mixed Colors. Cloud-like 

 flowers. May be dried for winter use. Pkt. 25c. 



Stocks (Gilliflower) a. 



754. Trysomic Seven-Weeks, Mixed Colors. An excellent range 

 of colors in this 85% double mixture. Height 1 ft. Earliest garden 

 Stock on the market. Pkt. 50c. 



876. Dwarf, Double Ten-Weeks, Mixed Colors. Plants 12 inches 

 with flowers of white, yellow, pink and blue. Pkt. 25c. 



653. Evening Scented Stock. An old-fashioned annual grown for 

 the entrancing fragrance which it emits during the evening. Lilac 

 flowers. 15 to 18 in. Pkt. 25c. 



Sweet Peas 



A., p. 



Culture. Sow as early in spring as the ground can be worked in 

 rich, well-limed soil with good drainage. Make a trench about a foot 

 wide and deep and fill to about 4 inches from the top with a mixture 

 of soil, rotted stable manure and humus. Firm soil well. Sow seed 

 and cover with about an inch of soil. Cultivate them and gradually 

 fill up the trench to the level of the ground. One ounce will plant a 

 15- foot row. 



CUTHBERTSON FLORIBUNDA STRAIN 

 886. Finest Mixed Colors. A well-balanced blend. Pkt. 25c. 



EARLY MULTIFLORA TYPE 

 665. Supreme Mixture. Contains the best color range of the early 

 varieties. Pkt. 25c. 



BUSH TYPE SWEET PEAS 

 878A. Knee-Hi, Mixed Colors. Bush type plants needing no sup- 

 port but producing full-length stems and multiple florets. Pkt. 35c. 

 878. Little Sweetheart, Mixed Colors. A new and entirely dif- 

 ferent class of Sweet Pea. Upright plants, 8 inches high, form a per- 

 fectly rounded bush. Pkt. 35c. 



LATE SPENCER OR ORCHID-FLOWERING 

 VARIETIES 

 898. Superb Mixed Spencers. Pkt. 25c. 



EVERLASTING SWEET PEAS 

 778. Lathyrus latlfolius. P. Hardy perennial climber growing to 

 8 feet. Pkt. 35c. 



878. Bush Type Sweet Pea, Little Sweetheart. Pkt. 3Sc. 



Sweet William (Dianthus barbatus)A.B.,R-G. 



An old-fashioned border plant which is usually treated as a biennial. 

 870. Red Monarch. AAS Winner 1966. A new annual Sweet Wil- 

 liam which may also be treated as a biennial. Seed sown in early 

 spring will bloom in early summer with plants 9 inches tall. If 

 sown in fall will bloom early the following spring, with plants 16 

 inches tall. The color is a bright scarlet-red with white stamens. 

 Well-rounded clusters. Pkt. 50c. 



722. Wee Willie. A. The J^-inch flowers are edged in combinations 

 of deep rose-pink, crimson, ruby and white and show when the plant 

 is only 2 inches in height. Ultimate height 4 to 6 inches. Pkt. 35c. 



903. Single, Mixed Colors. B. 



904. Double, Mixed Colors. B. 



905. Dwarf Double, Mixed Colors. B. Only 10 inches high bearing 

 large heads of flowers in a wide range of attractive colors. 



Any of the above three varieties, pkt. 25c. 



877. Sungold. Spectacula 

 that stand 4 to 5 feet high. 

 763. Mammoth Russian 



Sunflower (Helianthus) A. 



4 to 5-inch golden yellow double 

 Pkt. 25c. 

 Pkt. 25c. 



Tithonia A. 



947. Torch. 3 to 4 ft. Color varies from orange- topaz through tan- 

 gerine. Pkt. 25c. 



Torenia A. 



907. Fournieri. Blue flowers with yellow centers. A fine plant for 

 shady borders and beds. Pkt. 25c. 



Tritoma (Red-Hot Poker) p. 



908. Hybrida. Striking red spires of bloom from August on. 3 ft. 

 Pkt. 25c. 



877. Sunflower, Sungold. Pkt. 25c. 



907. Torenia Fournieri. Pkt. 25c. 



WASHINGTON, D. C. 



