Hollyhocks, Prize Double. 
The perfect doubleness of the magnificent, large flowers will please 
the most critical. All the best colors, from deep yellow, red rose, light 
buff, carmine, scarlet, flesh color, creamy white tinted with rose, pur- 
ple, yellow on dark ground, crimson flaked with salmon, cherry red. 
cretin on violet ground, lilac on brown ground, dark crimson to pure 
white, also black. If sown early in March or April the plants will 
bloom the first year. All colors mixed. Pkt., 50 seeds, 5 cts. 
Double Maroon, 50 seeds, 5c Double Salmon Rose, 50 seeds, 5c 
Bright Pink, 50 seeds, 5c “ White, 50 seeds, 5c 
** Bright Red, 50 seeds, 5c “ Yellow, 50 seeds, 5c 
Mrs. Robert Ward, Kaysville, Utah, Feb. 8, 1907, twites: It is 
ten years since I started getting seeds from you. Hike your seeds 
better than any others. 
Hollyhocks, Double Alleghany. 
Mammoth flowers, wonderfully formed of loosely 
arranged fringed petals, which look as if made from 
the finest China silk, and have none of the formality 
of the ordinary type. The colors vary from the pal- 
est shrimp pink to deep red. Pkt., 50 seeds, 5 cts. 
Hollyhocks, Single. 
Many prefer the single-flowering Hollyhocks. They are usually of 
freer growth than the doubles, and present a very handsome appear- 
ance when covered with their artistic blossoms. 
Pkt., 50 seeds, 5 cts. 
Job’s Tears, Coix Lachryma. 
Curious, ornamental grass, with broad, corn-like leaves, and seeds 
of a light slate color. Valuable for the formation of winter bouquets. 
Strings of handsome beads are made from the seeds. Hardy annual. 
3 feet high. Pkt., 30 seeds, 5 cts.; oz., 30 cts. 
Kokhia Scoparia or Summer Cypress. 
The plants grow freely from seed sown in the open ground, when 
the trees are coming out in leaf, and from the earliest stage of growth 
in the spring until they reach maturity in the fall the plants are al- 
ways of globe-like fomn. The plants branch freely, and stems are 
clothed with slender light green leaves. Early in the fall the ends of 
shoots are thickly set with small bright-scarlet flowers— the bushy 
platits resembling balls of fire. The plants are equally showy, plant- 
ed singly to show the round ball-like form on all sides, or grown in 
continuous rows or hedges. Pkt., 300 seeds, 5 cts. 
Eau GaUe, Wis., October 1. 1907. 
Miss C. H. Lippincott: 
Ixist spring I sent you an order for flower seeds. Among 
the rest I sent for Petunia seed; they were double ones and very 
cheap, so it seemed to me, only 8 cts. I had paid 25 and 80 cts. 
and never got more than one double one, and never got that but 
once. Can you imagine my surprise when I found six lovely 
double ones and some wonderfully fine single ones. The double 
ones I can’t describe, they are so nice. I am very glad to rec- 
ommend your seeds. 
Mr 8. A. M. Staysa. 
