7 
Marigold 
French 
Josephine 
Marigold, Yellow Supreme 
For a generation or more we had no improvement in 
the useful African Marigolds. The old-fashioned, orange 
and lemon-colored types, with their pungent odor, re¬ 
mained unbroken and unchanged. Then, a few years ago, 
came the sensational Guinea Gold which loosened the 
“bath-sponge” shape and tightness of the flower and 
added a glittering new color. Now comes Yellow Supreme 
whose giant, perfectly formed flowers have broad, over¬ 
lapping petals symmetrically arranged in almost perfect 
camellia form, and a soft clear shade of moonlight yellow 
comparable to no other flower in the Marigold family. 
In place of the old and often unpleasantly pungent odor, 
this superb new variety has an aromatic herb-like fragrance 
that is faint and entirely pleasing. Pkt. 25c. 
Pansies 
Breek’s Century 
of Progress 
This dainty French 
Marigold never fails to 
call forth admiration. 
The velvety textured, 
golden brown flowers 
have a thread-like golden 
edge which gives them 
an unusual distinction. 
A considerable variation 
in flower markings must; 
be expected, even from 
flowers growing on the 
same plant. Growth 
being somewhat strag¬ 
gly, it is best used in the 
center of beds or for a 
filler in perennial bor¬ 
ders. Highly recom¬ 
mended. Pkt. 10c. 
In our many years of 
experience we have never 
seen a strain of mixed 
Pansies that produced 
flowers of such colossal size 
or such rare individual 
beauty. The results of a 
century of progress in 
Pansy development are cer¬ 
tainly manifest when 
compares these superb crea¬ 
tions with Pansies of even 
the best commercial strains. 
Illustrated and more fully I 
Pkt. 1 
more 
described on page 28. 
$ 1 . 00 . 
French Marigold, Josephine 
Calendula, Orange Shaggy 
This new “Marygold” has big, informally fringed 
flowers resembling fluffy Japanese chrysanthemums. The 
color is a delightful, two-tone combination, graduating 
from light orange-yellow in the center to a deep burning 
one of orange at the circumference—a most effective 
arrangement of shades. Stems are long and strong. The 
vigorous plants grow normally about 18 inches high. 
Pkt. 35c. 
Zinnia, Desert Gold 
Gardeners who appreciate the beauty of rainbow color¬ 
ing will delight in this selection of giant, broad-petaled 
flowers with yellow shades ranging from creamy ochre to 
deep glowing gold. The wonderfully varied harmony of 
colors is equally effective in the house or in the garden, by 
daylight or artificial light. A splendid new variety for 
those who delight in the showy effects of the well-known 
Dahlia-flowered strain. Pkt. 25c. 
Calendula, 
Orange 
Shaggy 
