83 
H. G. Hastings Co., Seedsmen, Atlanta, Georgia. 
DCTIIMIAC Petunias are very popular in the South; easily grown, 
■ t and make most beautiful flower beds of showy colors. 
No garden is complete without them. They are hardy annuals; heat, rain, 
drought do not affect them. They bloom in a very short time and continue 
blooming from early summer to late fall. Sow thinly in open beds when 
trees are starting to leaf. Scatter thinly and cover lightly. Can also be 
started earlier, in boxes in the house, and transplanted. 
Finest Mi.xed (No. 853)—Solid colors, without variation in markings. 
Packet, 5 cents. . ^ 
Hastings’ Striped and Blotched (No. 854)—A splendid mixture of finest 
striped, blotched and variegated sorts. Packet, 10 cents. 
Giant Single Fringed, Jlixed (No. 855)—Immense single fringed flowers of 
finest shades and colors. Surpass anything ever offered in petunias. Pack¬ 
et, 20 cents. ^ „ 
Double Mixed Petunias (No. 856)—Seed saved from finest large flowered 
collection. About 50 per cent come double. Those that come single are 
most highly colored and blotched. Sow seed of these and Giant Single 
Fringed in boxes, in the house, transplanting afterwards to open ground. 
Packet, 25 cents. 
Hastings’ Superb Mixed Poppies 
Gorgeous is the only woril that can describe the brilliancy of a bed of our 
Superb Mixed Poppies. They contain all the famous varieties in the widest 
range of color and shape. Sow very early, as seed germinate best when 
ground is cool. Scatter thinly and barely cover the small, fine seed. When 
well up thin out to 10 inches apart. They bloom better with plenty of room 
for development. Poppies should be sown where they are to remain as they 
need no transplanting. Both single and double popples are very showy 
flowers and make wonderful beds and borders. California, the famous 
flower state, has great fields of poppies along the railroads and highways, 
the wonder of visitors as well as the admiration of Californians. Notice the 
illustration showing different types of these beautiful popples on this page. 
Hastings’ Superb Mi.xed (No. 863). Packet, 5 cents; ounce, 30 cents. We can 
supply, in separate varieties, the following: 
DOUBLE CARNATION FLOWERED >IIXED (No. 864)—Large double flow¬ 
ers : beautiful, fringed petals. Packet, 5 cents; ounce, 30 cents. 
CARDINAL (No. 865)—Glowing shades of cardinal red. Finest double 
form. Packet. 6 cents; ounce, 35 cents. 
Hastings’ Petunias—.All Sorts Mixed 
AMERICAN FLAG (No. 866)—Scarlet and white. Packet, 5 cents. 
MIKADO (No. 867)—Double fringed. Crimson scarlet, striped white. Pkt., 5c. 
PEACOCK (No. 868)—Brilliant scarlet, with black ring and cherry center. 
5 cents* 
SHIRLEY (No. 869)—New delicate colors. See illustration in color on in¬ 
side front cover. Packet, 5 cents. 
TULIP (No. 870)—Intense scarlet, tulip or cup-shaped, two inches across, 
black blotch at base of petals. Packet, 5 cents. 
BRIDE (No. 871)—Extra large, white flowers. Packet, 5 cents. 
ORIENTALE (No. 872)—New perennial poppy, coming up year after year. 
Immense single scarlet flowers, 6 inches across. Packet, 10 cents. 
Single Head or pniox Hrummonni urauumora 
PHLOX DRUMMONDI all annual flowers in 
the South. Sow? seed as soon as soil can be worked in the 
spring: broadcast, and work in lightly, plant finer for bed¬ 
ding for early display. Phlox, being the easiest of all flow¬ 
ers to grow in the South, and one of the most beautiful, 
showy annuals, has attained immense popularity. Our va¬ 
rieties are noteworthy for their variety and brilliance of col¬ 
ors, and also for their perfection and large size, a single 
floret often covering a flfty-cent piece. 
Phlox, Finest Mixed (No, 858)—All shades and colors. 
Packet, 5 cents; ounce, 75 cents. 
Phlox, Grandiflora Mixed (No. 859)—Large flowers, twice 
the size of the common type borne in large clusters, it is 
well wmrth the slight difference in price to have the greater 
brilliancy of display. Packet, 10c; ounce, $1.00. 
Phlox, New Dwarf Mixed (No. 860)—Small plants growing 
6 inches high, literall.v covered with trusses of large, bril¬ 
liant flowers. When in full bloom the beds are a mass of 
color, the green of the plants being almost entirely covered. 
Packet, 10 cents; % ounce, 50 cents. 
Phlox, Cuspidata—Star Phlox (No. 861)—All shades and 
colors of the phlox family, combined in star-shaped flowers, 
each petal being pointed. Packet, 10 cents. 
Hastings’ Superb Mixed Poppies—Best Double and Single 
