Roses - Carnations ^ ^ 
H & S QUALITY 
<s§| Plants - Seeds - Bulbs 
Carnations of 1934 
Amigo 
This is just what this variety is. A friendly cheerful 
flower that will favor you with a bounteous crop of 
lovely flowers. “Amigo” is gay and bright and will add 
cheer and color to your garden. This Carnation in color 
is most distinct. The base or ground color of rosy coral 
is deeply ingrained with broad bars of madder lake. 
Candlelight 
Cheerful, warm and glowing. A splendid Carnation. 
The heavy yellow, wax-like petals are greatly enhanced 
in beauty by featherings and tongues of flame shooting 
upward from the center of the flower to the extreme 
edges of the petals. “Candlelight” is a most excellent 
Carnation. 
Canary Cottage 
A splendid yellow-sparkling, clear and full of life. 
“Canary Cottage” will be a fine addition to the yellow 
class. Good yellows have always been scarce. At times 
this variety is faintly tinged with orchid on the outer 
margin of the petals. 
Dawn 
Soft golden yellow beautifully striped. Wide bars of 
old-rose extending the full length of the petals. The 
same color effect is often seen at dawn when the soft 
yellow light of morning is pierced with broad beams of 
Rose. Dawn is a star, even in this new field. 
Flag of Spain 
The contrasting colors of this variety . . . deep orange 
and crimson . . . suggested the name “Flag of Spain.” 
The flower is full and double, borne high above the 
foliage like a flag unfurled. The variegation is most 
decided, each color standing on its own merits, clear and 
distinct, lending the flower a flag-like appearance. 
Harvest Moon 
“Harvest Moon” is the largest of all our new Carna¬ 
tions. Fiery orange flowers, round and full, rise well 
above the foliage. When you have grown this fine 
variety, the reason for the name will be quite apparent, 
as the color, size and form are all suggestive of the 
giant autumn moon. 
Ivanhoe 
Positively startling in appearance. “Ivanhoe” is 
distinct from all other carnations of this set. The center 
of the flower is gray or marble-white. The outer half of 
the petal is marble-white, exquisitely etched with 
tongues of purple crimson. The delicate fragrance and 
elegant form appeal to the deeper senses of things that 
are fine. 
Mountain Haze 
Undoubtedly you have noticed the wonderful coloring 
that fills our mountain canyons just after sundown on 
summer evenings. Rich purples, rosy-mauve and lilac 
shades are ever present in our beautiful canyons during 
this enchanting period of the day. The same soft color 
tones are expressed in the new and unusual Carnation 
■“Mountain Haze.” 
Northern Lights 
Such a Carnation! Shades of old rose and buff, so 
subtly and delicately blended that like an aurora itself 
the color tones are inseparable. And again, to support 
the name, the color transition is electric. The points and 
scallops of the beautiful fringed petals are tinged with 
deepest carmine. A most effective and lovely variety. 
Peppermint 
The name of this splendid variety was chosen both 
for the color and the fragrance. When this variety 
blooms in your garden your memory will have a pleas¬ 
ant journey back to other days. The fragrance is de¬ 
cidedly peppermint and the stripes of white and red 
immediately suggest the old peppermint stick that all 
confectioners used to carry. 
Phosphorus 
A beautiful tri-color sulphury yellow. Many of the 
petals are overlaid with a delicate suffusion of orchid. 
The outer edges of the flower are exquisitely stenciled 
with brilliant arrow-like shafts of crimson lake. A dull 
phosphorescent glow emanating from this variety lends 
a distinct and novel appearance. 
Persian Carpet 
The name of this beautiful variety in a measure 
conveys to the mind the strange color combination 
embodied in this Carnation. The ground or base color 
is a shade of deep Persian lilac, while the bars or stripes 
are a pleasing and unusual shade of cinnabar. A truly 
strange and unique variety. 
Laura—A Gem in Fancies 
13 
