HAMILTON’S HAWKEYE SEEDS 
29 
Petunia 
Few plants equal the Petunias for freedom of bloom and variety 
of color. Petunias will produce handsome, sweet-scented flowers 
in their delicate and gorgeous colors throughout the whole Sum¬ 
mer. Unsurpassed for boxes, beds or informal garden planting. 
Rosy Morn. Rosy pink with large white throat. Pkt., 15c. 
Heavenly Blue. An excellent silvery, sky-blue. Pkt., 15c. 
Balcony or Trailing. Blue, rose or white. Pkt., 15c. 
Hybridia. Mixed. Pkt., 10c. 
Portulaea (Moss Rose) 
Single. Mixed. Pkt., 10c. 
Double. Mixed. Pkt., 10c. 
Sweet Peas 
Spensers. Late choice mixed. Pkt., 10c. 
Spencers. Early mixed. Pkt., 10c. 
Grandiflora. Large flower mixed. Pkt., 10c. 
Zinnias 
Zinnias love hot weather, so they are par¬ 
ticularly adapted to our American summers. 
They have great appetites, appreciating 
rich, well fertilized soil and needing a mod¬ 
erate amount of water. Such growing con¬ 
ditions will produce lusty robust plants and 
gorgeous flowers for any gardener. Zinnias 
bloom for many weeks. 
Pompon or Lilliput Double 
12 to 15 in. 
The plants form handsome little bushes 
and fairly bristle with tiny, short-stemmed, 
very double flowers hardly exceeding a daisy 
flower in size. They are very pretty plants; 
bloom all summer until late in the fall. 
Purple, golden, orange, salmon, rose, scar¬ 
let, white and mixed. All 10c per pkt. 
Double Flowered 2 *4 it. 
Crested and Curled. The flowers are large, 
the petals being twisted and curved into 
most graceful forms. The colors comprise 
all the brilliant shades characteristic of the 
Zinnias. Pkt., 10c. 
Petunia 
Golden Dawn. This beautiful 
shade of golden-yellow comes 
true to color and form. 
Old Gold. Glowing burnished 
deep and lighter shades of Old 
Gold. 
Oriole. An immense orange and 
gold bicolor, changing slightly as 
it ages. 
Polar Bear. A very large pure 
white, the best white yet seen in 
Zinnias. True Dahlia form. 
Scarlet Flame. A large, beauti¬ 
ful, bright scarlet, with a delight¬ 
ful blending of orange through¬ 
out the petal. This is not a bicolor. 
Each of the above: Pkt., 15c; 
Dahlia Flowered 3 to 4 ft. 
The broad petals are closely imbricated, 
sometimes seeming almost to be piled one 
upon the other, the flowers often 4 inches in 
depth and 6 to 8 inches in diameter, resem¬ 
bling Show Dahlias. 
Canary Bird. A delicate shade of prim¬ 
rose. 
Crimson Monarch. Rich crimson. By far 
the largest and best of red shades. Flowers 
often eight inches in diameter. 
Dream. A fine, deep lavender, turning to 
purple (Mallow Purple). 
Exquisite* By far the most pleasing of 
our collection. Color light rose with center 
a deep rose. (Tyrian Rose.) 
Sweet Peas any 4 pkts. for 50c. 
PERENNIALS 
Aqullegia (Columbine) 
Beautiful hardy perennials, producing' graceful spurred flowers on 
2-ft. stems. One of the most important of our early hardy flowers 
and should be grown in quantity, being easy to establish and thriving 
in almost any situation. 
LONG SPURRED. Blue, Pink, Orange and Scarlet shades. Each, 
25o pkt. 
Shasta Daisy 
Fine hardy border plants, large, daisy-like flowers being produced 
in great profusion all summer. 
ALASKA. 2-2% ft. Splendid for cutting. 15c per pkt. 
Dahlia-Flowered Zinnia 
Digitalis (Foxglove) 
These produce spires of blossoms 3 to 5 ft. high. Stately old gar¬ 
den favorites for garden, shrubbery borders and naturalizing in suit¬ 
able places. Rose, White and Mixed. Each, 10c pkt. 
Coreopsis 
LANCEOLATA GRANDIFLORA. 2 ft. June-October. Large 
orange-yellow flowers on long graceful stems. About the best yellow 
cut flower blooming incessantly. One of the perennials which will 
flower the first year if sown early. 10c per pkt. 
Delphinium 
(Perennial Larkspur) 
Few plants are so handsome in the garden as the perennial Lark¬ 
spurs. There are many species in cultivation, but the most important 
are the tall hybrids, of which there are many varieties with a won¬ 
derful range of color. They are valuable for their great variety in 
height, varying from 1 to 6 ft.; for their great variety in shades of 
color, varying from the palest lavender through every conceivable 
shade of blue to deep indigo. They thrive in almost any situation. A 
good, deep, rich soil will repay with larger and better flowers. Remove 
the flower before the seed pods form and they will flower later in 
season. 
Dwarf Chinese. Blue Butterfly. Pkt., 10c. A June fancy. Pkt., 10c. 
Tall Hybrids. Belladonna. Pkt., 15c. Giant mixed. Pkt., 10c. 
