LANDRETHS* FLOWER SEEDS 



(Price per packet, and l A ounce) 

 VERBENA 



The Verbenas are half-hardy perennials. No 

 flower garden is complete without Verbena. 

 Mostly upright, but when prostrate taking root 

 freely where stems come in contact with the 

 ground. Grand for bedding. In bloom 90 days. 



Sow the seed -J inch deep in a box of light rich 

 soil. Start in February or March under gentle 

 heat of hot-bed or even in sunny window, and 

 after hardening off transplant the seedlings in 

 May or June in open ground in good, rich soil. 



Auricula-flowered. — White eye; height 9 inches, 

 spread 2 feet \ Oz., 50c; 5 



Defiance Brilliant Scarlet | Oz., 50c; 5 



Firefly or Scarlet. — Height 9 inches; spread 

 2 feet iOz., 50c; 5 



Hybrida Mixed Colors. — Height 9 inches; spread 

 2 feet | Oz., 60c; 5 



Mammoth White | Oz., 60c; 5 



Mammoth Blue i Oz., 60c; 5 



WALLFLOWER 



A favorite with old-fashioned people. It is a half- 

 hardy biennial, producing beautiful fragrant 

 flowers. Requires protection during the Winter. 

 Blooms second year. 18 inches. 



Large Flowering Double Mixed Oz., 75c; 5 



Large Flowering Single Mixed. — 2 feet 



Oz., 75c; 5 



(Price per packet, and *4 ounce) 



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Zinnia 

 ZINNIA 



Double. Is a long-stemmed annual of robust habit, 

 blooming from July to October. Seeds can be 

 planted in the open, or young plants transplanted 

 if desired. Dwarf varieties should stand about one 

 foot apart, and tall varieties double this distance. 

 Will grow anywhere and stand any amount of 

 rough treatment. In bloom 60 days. Plants 

 18 inches' spread. Blooming until killed by frost. 



Red Riding Hood. — A gem of one foot tall, rich 

 scarlet double flowers, very effective. 



lOz., 25c; 5 



Large Flowering Dwarf Mixed. — Flowers often 

 five inches across; all colors } Oz., 20c; 5 



Large Flowering Tall Mixed. — Flowers big as 

 dahlias. Exceeding showy, keeping long after 

 cutting. All colors, 2 feet \ Oz., 20c; 5 



Ornamental Flowers 



None Better Than Landreths* 



Why Should They Be Better? 



The wonderful extension of the culture of bright ornamental flowers in front yards and 

 gardens noticeable in towns, villages and along the countryside everywhere has mostly devel- 

 oped since the general use of the automobile, householders of all grades desiring to present 

 to the throngs of passers-by glimpses of floral beauty which before were never attempted, 

 not only inside their fences, but along the public roads. If you have not already done 

 your part in this aesthetic direction, why not commence now, or why not extend the orna- 

 mentation? One dollar expended in Seeds will produce 1,000 plants of various forms of 

 such brilliancy and attractiveness as to make your place a joy to look upon and the admira- 

 tion of every beholder. 



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