PERENNIAL FLOWER SEED 
27 
GAILARDIA 
Blanket Flower. A very free blossom¬ 
ing perennial bearing large yellow or red 
daisy-shaped flowers all through the Sum¬ 
mer. Easy to grow. Fine for cutting; two 
feet. Mixed colors. Pkt. 15c. 
CARNATION HARDY BORDER 
Carnations are general favorites for 
their delicious fragrance and richness of 
colors. They are indispensable, both for 
greenhouse culture in Winter and for the 
garden in Summer. The Marquerite and 
Chabaud types are the best for Summer 
flowering. 
Double mixed. A good hearty strain for 
outdoor culture, flowering the second sea¬ 
son and producing a mass of flowers in a 
great variety of colors. l /& oz. 50c; pkt. 15c 
CHRYSANTHEMUMS 
C. Maximum. Ox Eye Daisy. Flowers 
like the wild white Daisy, but twice as 
large. Handsome when in flower and the 
flowers have good stems for cutting. 
Hardy and easily grown in full sun. Pkt. 15c 
Shasta Daisies. Alaska. An excellent 
hardy perennial variety. Flowers 4 to 5 
inches across, of the purest glistening 
white, with broad overlapping petals and 
borne on strong stems; a beautiful cut 
flower, remaining in good condition a week 
or more. x /\ oz. 75c; pkt. 25c. 
DELPHINIUM—HARD LARKSPURN 
Few plants are so handsome as the per¬ 
ennial Larkspur. The most important are 
the tall hybrids, varying from 1 to 6 feet, 
and from the palest lavender through 
every conceivable shade of blue to deep 
indigo. 
GOLD MEDAL HYBRIDS 
Height 6 feet. Unquestionably the finest 
strain of mixed hybrids offered. Large 
flowers on spikes two feet and over, the 
majority running in the light shades of 
blue. Mixed colors. Pkt. 15c. 
BELLADONNA (Light Blue) 
Two feet; flowers exquisite shade of tur- 
quois blue. Pkt. 25c. 
Double Hybrids. Finest double flower¬ 
ing mixed in great variety of charming 
colors. Pkt. 15c. 
LUPINUS POLYPHYLLUS—LUPINE 
This will be found a great acquisition to 
any garden. It forms dense bushes about 
4 feet high, of elegant spikes completely 
clothed to the ground with snowy-white 
and deepest sea blue flowers. Mixed. 
Pkt. 15c 
SCABIOSA CAUCASCA 
While resembling the shape of the an¬ 
nual Scabiosa, this hardy variety bears 
large blooms of a delicate lilac blue shade. 
The plants will grow about 2 feet high, 
blooming from July until frost. A fine 
plant for borders or cut flowers. Pkt. 15c 
DIANTHUS — HARDY GARDEN PINKS 
These varieties are well adapted for 
beds and borders; delightful, refreshing, 
spicy odor, popularly known as “Sweet 
May Pinks’’ of the old-time gardens, and 
still considered among the most beautiful 
for massing and cutting. 
Plumarius. (Grass Pink or Pheasant-eye 
Pink) Single, with fringed edged flowers 
of various colors. Pkt. 15c. 
Plumarius FI.-PI. (Double Hardy Gar¬ 
den Pinks.) Double and semi-double va¬ 
rieties in beautiful colors. Pkt. 15c. 
Plumarius Semperflorens. (Ever-bloom¬ 
ing Hardy Garden Pink.) Very beautiful, 
sweet scented, double, semi-double and 
single flowers in great diversity of color. 
Pkt. 15c 
Dianthus Latifolius Atroccineus FI.-PI. 
(Ever-blooming Hybrid Sweet William.) 
A cross between an annual Dianthus and 
Sweet William, combining the free and 
continuous blooming qualities of the for¬ 
mer with the hardiness of the latter; in 
color an intense velvety crimson scarlet. 
Pkt. 15c 
HIBISCUS—NEW GIANT FLOWERING 
MARSHMALLOW 
Wonderfully improved form of our great¬ 
ly admired native Marshmallow, in which 
flowers of great size—frequently 10 to 12 
inches in diameter—have been developed. 
The colorings comprise rich, deep, red, 
soft pink and pure white. Plants grow 5 
to 8 feet high. Blossom from July to late 
Autumn. Pkt. 15c. 
PENTSEMON—BEARD TONGUE 
Attractive plants, much used in the 
hardy border. The bushes are pyramidal, 
2 to 3 feet high, with erect branches thick¬ 
ly set with flowers IV 2 inches long, vary¬ 
ing in all shades from rosy-white to purple 
with white or veined throats. Mixed col¬ 
ors. Pkt. 15c. 
GYPSOPHILA PANICULATA 
Baby’s Breath. Bridal Veil. The plants 
are small, starlike and borne in feathery 
sprays, which are highly esteemed for cut 
flowers as they lend a most graceful effect 
when combined in bouquets. This pleasing 
flower should be in every garden, for it is 
almost indispensable in the arrangement 
of flowers, either in vase or bouquet work. 
Pkt. 15c 
DIGITALIS—FOXGLOVE 
A very interesting family of old fash¬ 
ioned plants, whose culture is so simple 
as to bring them within the reach of all. 
D. purpurea, var. glovinioides. This has 
a very great variety of colors, but as it is 
difficult to keep the mtrue when growing 
separately, we offer it only in a mixture. 
Everyone should plant this strain. It 
grows in strong clumps and is one of^ oui 
very finest hardy perennials. Pkt. 15c. 
