QUICK ANNUAL FLOWERS 
If you want a “different” garden, more delight¬ 
ful than that of your neighbor,—if you want to 
get away from the hackneyed run of ordinary 
annual flowers—pretty as many of them are,— 
if you like to try new things and find new 
beauties, then you will enjoy the assortment of 
splendid rarities offered here. Of course some 
of them are annuals only by courtesy, being true 
perennials that will live for years, but every one 
of them will give fine flowers the same season 
that the seed is sown, if handled rightly, and so 
may be considered and treated as annuals. 
Anomatheca Cruenta—Loose sprays of rose car¬ 
mine flowers, marked with maroon. Dwarf. 
Very pretty. A bulb that will winter in the 
cellar. Pkt. 25c; special pkg. 60c. 
Argemone Platyceras Rosea—Bushy plants to 3 
feet, with handsome marbled spiny leaves and 
large “poppy flowers” of true Tyrian purple. 
Makes wonderful annual hedge. Pkt.. 15c; 
special pkg. 35c. 
Artemisia Sacrorum Viride—The Summer Fir. A 
quick vigorous annual hedge or specimen 
plant with finely cut fern-like leaf sprays. 
Four feet. Pkt. 15c; % oz. 35c. 
Aster Elegance—Very large single flowers with 
golden centers and gracefully curved petals; 
blue, scarlet, lavender, rose and white in 
blend. Lovely for cutting. Easier to grow 
than double Asters, and really more beauti¬ 
ful. 2 feet. Pkt. 15c; special pkg. 35c. 
Baeria Chrysostoma—Sunshine Flower or Gold¬ 
fields. Pretty little golden tufted daisies, 
with many petals. Pkt. 10c; spec. pkg. 25c. 
Bidens Dahloides—Black Cosmos. The flowers 
are rich velvety brown-maroon, almost black, 
and very like the Cosmos. 2 feet. Tuber¬ 
ous roots that may be stored. Pkt. 15c; spe¬ 
cial pkg. 35c. 
Callirhoe Involucrata—Poppy Mallow. Semi- 
trailing plants with striking cup-shaped 
blooms of fierce purple crimson. A true peren- 
nal, valuable for the rockery, bank or ter¬ 
race, but easy and blooms the first year. 
Pkt. 20c; special pkg. 50e. 
Cassia Nictitans—Partridge Pea. Splendid showy 
and easy plants with finely pinnate, almost 
fern-like foliage, sensitive to the touch, and 
large flowers in clusters, pure canary yellow 
with maroon patches. Dry soil. Two feet. 
Pkt. 15e; special pkg. 35c. 
Chaenactis Glabriscula—Gold Pins. Heads are 
like yellow pincushions, thrust through with 
golden pins, but there is an outer row of 
little scalloped florets like a double ruffle. 
Pkt. 10c; special pkg. 25c. 
Collinsia Verna—Blue Eyed Mary. Very pretty 
dwarf annual flowers, fine soft blue with 
white markings. Rich soil in shade. Pkt. 15c; 
special pkg. 35c. 
Collinsia Blend—Chinese Houses. Easy and 
highly attractive annual flowers. The stems, 
to 20 inches, carry successive whorls of bloom, 
oddly two-parted, the deeper colored lower lip 
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