CHARLOTTE M. HAINES, ROCKFORD, ILL., SEEDS GROWN BY A WOMAN 
Starred and Fringed Phlox 
Shirley Poppy 
Begonia Flowered 
Cavalcade has the rich orange scar¬ 
let color of the Single Shirley Amer¬ 
ican Legion, brilliant and most attrac¬ 
tive. . The large flowers are full 
begonia double, rich and beautiful, and 
they lend themselves admirably for 
floral arrangement. Packet 35c. 
Begonia Flowered Shirley Poppy 
BUILD A BEAUTIFUL ROCK GARDEN 
BRIGHT WKONG 
These cross-section views show 
the right and wrong way to lay up 
rocks. 
The Most Important Feature of a Flower Garden 
Everyone is talking Rock Garden these 
days—lots of my friends and customers 
are building them. Even on the small 
lot there is some place where a tiny rock 
garden may be tucked away; the com¬ 
pactness of a rock garden is one of its 
charms. There is no end to the interest¬ 
ing combinations of rocks and plants 
Pygmy mountains, Lilliputian valleys, 
can be built of rugged rocks; a trickle 
of water pretend a mountain torrent, los¬ 
ing itself in a mirror pool. 
A spot in full light and air, away from 
shade trees, is best. Any slope, too, 
can be used. Transforming into a rock 
garden is often the happiest treatment 
for a slope. Take advantage of any out¬ 
crop of natural rock about your grounds. 
An Ideal Rock Garden 
Make your rock garden a reproduction of nature in 
miniature. Strive . for natural surroundings for rock- 
loving plants. While there is charm in unusual layouts, 
orderly arrangements of rocks and planting are most 
pleasing. Your rock garden may be just a wall, or large 
enough for ridges, valleys and even bogs. Picture the 
finished form before starting construction. The plan 
may be anything fancy dictates but when possible it 
should have steps and paths about it. Irregular paths 
are most interesting, with walks following the valleys. 
Perennial Plants (grown from seed) are the most 
satisfactory as they last forever, while a few annuals 
for quick show are often desirable. 
The following is Mrs. Haines suggestions of Pretty 
and Desirable Perennial and Annual Flower Seeds, also 
Hardy Perennial Plants, that will make a Beautiful Rock 
Garden at a very moderate cost. 
Height Per 
Perennials—Seeds Inches Pkt. 
Alyssum — Saxatile—Yellow . . 12 8c 
Aster—Perennial — Mixed . 24 10c 
Canterbury Bells—Carpatiea—Blue. 9 10c 
Daisy—Giant Double — Mixed . 9 8c 
Delphinium—Chinese—Blue .18 8c 
Dianthus — Double Clove—Mixed . 12 10c 
Feverfew—Double White—White.18 8c 
Forget-me-not—Palustris—Blue . 10 10c 
Geum—Mrs. Bradshaw—Scarlet . 18 8c 
Ice Plant — Pink . 6 8c 
Kenilworth Ivy (Linaria)—Trailer. 8c 
Poppy—Iceland — Mixed . 12 7c 
Viola—Tufted Pansy—Mixed ;. 8 10c 
Annuals—Seeds 
Ageratum — Imperial—Blue . 18 7c 
Alyssum—Sweet — White . 8 6c 
Candytuft — Hyacinth Flow.—White . 12 8c 
Lobelia — Crystal Palace—Blue . 6 8c 
Marigold — French Dwarf—Mixed . 8 6c 
Nemesia—Mixed . 12 10c 
Petunia- — Rosy Mom—Pink . 8 8c 
Phlox—Dwarf — Mixed . 8 7c 
Portulaca — Double—Mixed . 6 10c 
HAINES Beautiful PHLOX 
Starred and Fringed 
In these new Phlox you will find something unusual in 
a garden flower. In the fringed flowers the petals are 
fimbriate, three-toothed, of a great variety of magni¬ 
ficent velvety colors with a bright eye in the center and 
a white border. In the Starred Phlox the central teeth 
of the petals are five or six times as large as the lateral 
ones, and projecting beyond them like little spines, 
give the flower a distinctively starlike form. Height 
12 inches. A11 colors mixed. Pkt. 8c; Vs oz. 28c: 
Vi °z. 80c. 
Dwarf Mixed 
. Dwarf stocky plants with good heads of large flowers 
M brilliant colors. The plants grow erect, only 6 to 8 
inches high. Pkt. 7c; Vs oz. 42c; Vi oz. $1.15. 
Drummondi, Fine Mixed 
Fine for bedding and cut flowers, an excellent strain. 
The color ranges in every conceivable shade, producing 
flowers of good size, 12 inches high. Pkt. 6c; i/ 8 oz. 16c; 
V 2 oz. 50c; 
oz. 90c. 
Perfection Large Flowering Phlox 
Haines New Perfection—Large 
Flowering Mixed 
fr 2 m sworn in open ground in fall or early spring 
will begin flowering in June and remain literally covered with 
bloom until after severe frosts late in autumn. For masses of 
f° «^ s . or , ^ or bouquets they are unsurpassed. The plants grow 15 
to 20 inches high. Pkt. 8c; i/ 8 oz. 26c; i/ 2 oz. 75c. 
Hardy or Perennial 
Seed Germinates Slowly 
varieties of the perennial Phlox are among the choic¬ 
est of flowers for bedding and border plants. They are 
hardy and need no protection, 3 feet high. Best Mixed. 
Pkt. 10c; Vs oz. 42c; 1/2 oz. $1.25. 
