New Double 
Sweet Scented Golden Gleam Nasturtiums 
GOLDEN GLEAM NASTURTIUM 
GOLDEN GLEAM, the new sweet scented golden flowered Nasturtium with long stems, 
has already won many medals and prizes in America and Europe. 
Splendid for bedding and borders. Very floriferous, the charming blossoms on long 
stems almost hiding the foliage. 
An inexpensive answer to that porch box problem. (The illustration above shows part 
of a window or porch box—just “Golden Gleam’’ in the box.) 
Delightful for pots also. The plants send out runners, so you can use either way—let 
them run and trail, or clip them off if you wish to keep in bush form. Note the new low 
prices. Pkt. 10c; oz. 25c; V4 lb. 75c. 
And now Scarlet Gleam and Glorious Gleam Hybiids (Nas¬ 
turtiums). Our seed grown for us by the introducer. Introducer s 
own descriptions , as follows: 
New Nasturtium “Double Scarlet Gleam” 
Those who have seen Scarlet Gleam growing, enthusiastically proclaim it even more 
intensely dazzling in color than the showy Golden Gleam. 
The flowers are a fiery orange scarlet, a color comparable to the brilliance of Scarlet 
Sage, or seeing a row of the plants one might visualize a showy border of scarlet Geran¬ 
iums. 
The individual blooms are of an immense size, almost 3 inches across, much larger than 
any Nasturtium ever known. The sweet fragrance is more pronounced, and the double 
flowers more uniformly well formed. 
The foliage is the same lush green characteristic of Golden Gleam, and the contrast of 
the large, double, fiery orange scarlet flowers above* their cool restful green leaves attracts 
and holds the eye at once, while the ease with which they can be grown under almost any 
conditions will make Scarlet Gleam the most popular all-around annual. 
The plants are semi-dwarf, throwing short runners from a well-rounded, free-flowering 
bush, with long wiry stems bearing the numerous flowers well above the foliage, which 
gives the effect of a solid mass of color. Pkt. (20 seeds) 25c; y z oz. $1.00; oz. $1.75. 
New Nasturtium “Double Gleam Hybrids” 
With the introduction of these Gleam Hybrids the flower world is enriched by an ad¬ 
vance in the forward progress of the plant world. 
As the Dahlia Flowered Zinnias in 1924 tolled the death knell of the single Zinnia, 
Double Gleam Nasturtiums in 1934 are the fountainhead from which will issue the flower 
of tomorrow in the Nasturtium family. 
The Hybrids are a collection] of gorgeously colored, large, well-formed flowers of such 
dazzling beauty that the mind hesitates to credit the evidence of the eyes. Colors cer¬ 
tainly never dreamed of before in a double Nasturtium abound in profusion—glorious flow- 
rs of salmon, golden yellow, orange scarlet, cerise, cream yellow, orange, crimson, and gold 
flushed scarlet combine with the foliage of fresh green. 
They thrive under almost any cultural conditions, and this factor, combined with the 
brilliance of their colors, assures Gleam Hybrid? of a universal popularity. 
The plants are semi-dwarf, throwing short runners from well-rounded, free-flowering 
bushes. Stems are long, and bear the flowers well above the foliage of the plant. In the 
garden or for cutting no flower could be more lovely, Pkt. 25c; y z oz, 85c; oz. $1.50. 
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