SEEDS WHICH SUCCEED 



(Prices per packet and 14 ounce) 



Phlox Drummondii Grandiflora 

 RICINUS 



The Castor Bean, in all its varieties, has a showy 

 tropical appearance, singly or in groups. Valua- 

 ble for screens. 



Sanguineus. — Red stalks and foliage, with bronze 

 tinge, seed-pods scarlet. 10 feet Oz., 25c; 5 



Zanzibariensis. — Largest-leaved variety, an ele- 

 gant centre plant. Leaves often 3 feet across. 

 12 feet high Oz., 25c; 5 



Mixed, All Varieties Oz., 25c; 5 



POPPY 



Every garden should have a good supply of Pop- 

 pies. They fit in almost anywhere and the per- 

 ennial varieties remain for years. Bracteatum, 

 Iceland and Orientale are perennials, the others 

 annuals. Sow seed in the open ground in the 

 Spring or Fall. Will not bear transplanting. 

 Most brilliant and showy flowers. 1 to 2 feet. 



Fire Dragon. — Single flower of four inches diameter, 

 most brilliant deep scarlet 5 



Cardinal Double— Dwarf , deep red. i Oz., 40c. ; 5 

 Danebrog. — Large. Scarlet, with white cross.... 

 « t , h Oz., 40c; 5 



Golden Gate. — Semi-double. Most brilliant 



yellow £Oz.,40c; 5 



Iceland. — Mixed colors. Perennials; if sown in 

 February will flower the same year and yield 



brilliant flowers all the season. Single 



| Oz., 90c; 10 



Carnation-flowered.— Fringed. Dwarf, all colors. 



|Oz., 15c; 5 



Peony-flowered.— Compact growth. Oz., 15c. ; 5 



(67) 



(Prices per packet and y 4 ounce) 



Shirley. — Flowers of a glossy, silk-like texture, 

 single or semi-double, colors light shades crimson, 

 rose, pink to rosy- white; some bordered with 

 white, others striped and blotched. ...^ Oz., 20c. ; 5 



Mixed.— All colors and varieties J Oz., 20c; 5 



Landreths' Sweet Peas 



Sow in permanent location, in single row, two 

 seeds to the inch, half-ounce of seeds to 

 every yard of row; cover one inch deep. 



Sweet Peas can be grown as easily as the common 

 garden Peas, simply requiring room and early 

 starting — planted even before the frost is out of 

 the ground. Best results are obtained by sowing 

 the preceding Autumn, as with deep roots in a deep, 

 rich soil the season of blooming is lengthened. They 

 do best when trained to trestles made of string or 

 wire. They should be thinned out about one inch 

 apart in rows, and if in parallel rows the rows should 

 be four (4) feet apart. 



Sweet Peas have a blooming period of about four 

 weeks, consequently to provide for a longer season 

 of flowering it is advisable, where garden spac e 

 permits, to make four or five sowings about two 

 weeks apart, making the first sowing before the 

 frost is out of the ground. But the blooming- 

 season is only partially fixed according to date of 

 sowing, for Nature is disposed to run flowering 

 time much together, whatever may have been the 

 date of sowing the seeds. 



Poppy 



