78 
F. LAGOMARSINO & SONS, SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA 
KENILWORTH IVY 
A hardy perennial trailing plant, especially 
adapted for hanging baskets, window boxes, 
or for trailing over walls. Pkt. 15c. 
KOCHIA 
(Summer Cypress, Burning Bush) 
TRICHOPHYLLA—An easily-grown annu¬ 
al, forming bushes 2 to 2feet high and re¬ 
sembling a close-clipped ornamental evergreen. 
The globe-shaped or pyramidal bushes are 
close and compact and of a pleasing light 
green color. The plant may be grown singly 
or in the form of a hedge or background. 
Early in the Fall innumerable little flowers 
appear and the bush takes on a deep red tinge. 
Pkt. 10c; V 2 oz. 25c; oz. 40c. 
KUDZU VINE 
(Jack-and-the-Bean-Stalk) 
(Puearia Thunbergiana) 
Flourishes where nothing else will grow. 
The large bold leaves of brightest green af¬ 
ford dense shade. Its greatest feature is its 
wonderful growth often attaining a height of 
50 feet the second season. Pkt. 10c; oz. 60c. 
: L ANT AN A 
A shrub-like plant 2 to 3 feet high, bearing 
verbena-like clusters of flowers, in orange, 
rose and other colors. Very free bloomer. 
MIXED COLORS. Pkt. 10c; y A oz. 30c. 
KOCHIA—SUMMER CYPRESS 
ANNUALS, FLOWERS OF ECONOMY 
Annuals are the cheapest of all materials for the 
flower garden. You get more returns for less 
money out of a packet of annual flower seed than 
from any other garden investment. They are sure¬ 
fire producers and the garden standby for the Sum¬ 
mer months, particularly for August and September 
and perennials are few in number which have those 
months as their blooming season. 
Annuals are pre-eminently for outdoor sowing. 
You can’t have too many annuals, either for color 
in the garden or for bouquets indoors. 
They come in all sizes from zinnias rivaling the 
dahlias in size to the small but indispensable 
baby’s breath or gypsophila. 
There are a few annuals that everybody wants. 
For edging, ageratum is a standby in its dwarf 
form. For cutting the older species of tall growth, 
ageratum mexicanum is best, making three feet of 
well-branched stem with fine length of stem for 
cutting its lavender blooms, which go so well with 
many pinks, such as zinnias and larkspur. 
The newer single types of asters and the new 
Sunshine anemoe flowered are more popular for 
cutting when one becomes acquainted with them 
even than the older late branching and ostrich 
plume types, fine as they are. They are well worth 
a trial. 
Calendulas are an indispensable bouquet material 
in glowing orange. Marigolds give a wealth of 
bouquet material and bloom until frost cuts them 
down. Zinnias are everybody’s flower, either for 
masses outdoors or for cutting. The bachelor’s 
buttons or centaureas, ragged and dingy of foliage, 
are beautiful bouquet material that will grow for 
anybody. Snapdragons are now aristocrats among 
cut flowers and beautiful for beds in the garden— 
you can get almost any color except blue in snaps 
now. 
Stocks furnish beauty and fragrance in the garden 
and have fine value for indoor use. The annual 
gaillardias are fine cutting material in red and yel¬ 
low. Petunias are sure-fire sheets of color for the 
garden and for window and porch boxes, a most 
obliging annual in an amazing variety of form and 
color. 
NEW RUST-PROOF SNAPDRAGONS 
See Page 2. 
