These Flowers in Abundance Th is Summer 
L 
Sunshine Calendula 
This lovely new Calendula is shown in color 
on the front cover of this Catalog. Turn to it, 
and look at it again. Did you ever see a 
Calendula that could compare with it? The 
color reminds you of the golden buttercups 
from the fields, with the added charm of 
loosely arranged petals. Sunshine is a fine 
flower for cutting, and is at its best when 
shown with delphiniums or other blue flowers. 
The flowers are considerably larger than those 
of the ordinary Calendula and are carried on 
long stiff stems. Pkg. 25c. 
Orange Radio Calendula 
Calendula, Radio 
Golden Gleam 
The New Double Nasturtium 
Gardeners have long wanted a pure golden 
yellow double Nasturtium. Here it is. The 
introducer was extremely careful in selecting 
plants for stock-seeding, with the result that 
practically every flower came double when 
Golden Gleam was introduced last year—and 
the same care has been exercised in raising the 
seed for 1934. Our seed comes direct from the 
introducer and is therefore to be depended on 
without question. The flowers are nearly 3 
inches across and carried on stems at least 
6 inches long. (Pictured in color on third 
cover.) Pkg. 15c; */2 oz. 30c; oz. 50c. 
This was the first of the new Radio Calen¬ 
dulas. The petals are quilled—not flat— 
and are of a pronounced rich orange color. 
The flowers of this variety, and also of Golden 
Beam, are considerably larger than the general 
type of Calendula. The Radio Calendulas 
are a distinction to the family. Pkg. 15c; 
2 pkgs. 25c. 
Golden Beam Radio 
Calendula 
The latest of the Radio Calendulas. The 
color is bright golden yellow, and the flower 
carries the quilled petals of the Radio type. 
Pkg. 25c. 
Siberian Wallflower 
Cheiranthus Allionii 
Flaming orange flowers that glisten like 
gold in the sun. The plants are 12 to 15 inches 
tall, and bloom freely in May and June. 
Extremely popular. Pkg. 10c. 
Siberian Wallflowers (Cheiranthus Allionii) 
The Roggli Pansy seed produced the 
most beautiful Pansies I have ever 
raised in my garden.—A. S. Kloss, 
Brunswick, Ga. 
Your Roggli Swiss Giant Pansies gave 
wonderful flowers last year. — Mrs. 
A. E. Green, Hilliards, Pa. 
New Foxglove 
While the flowers are of the usual thimble- 
shape, the color is distinctly unusual—a 
beautiful salmon- or apricot-pink. It is a 
distinct addition to the Digitalis family. 
Pkg. 25c. 
New Foxglove 
Dianthus * Pinks 
Allwoodii alpinus. July to August. Bears large 
flowers in shades of rose and pink. Grows 
4 to 6 inches high and is excellent for the 
rock-garden. Pkg. 35c. 
Sweet Wivelsfield. Hardy biennial, treated as 
an annual. Delicately fringed, sweet-william- 
Iike flowers in various colors are produced 
from July to frost. Pkg. 15c; 2 pkgs. 25c. 
Unwin’s Dwarf Dahlias 
These Dwarf Dahlias grow readily from seed, 
making plants about 2 feet high and producing 
great quantities of semi-double flowers. Ex¬ 
tremely effective in a massed planting and 
valuable for cutting. (Illustrated in color on 
third cover page.) Pkg. 25c. 
Dianthus, Sweet Wivelsfield 
