16 Perry Seed Company, 12-13 Faneuil Hall Square, Boston 
Flowers Worthy of a Place in Your Garden 
CHRYSANTHEMUM. H. H. P. 
Cascade or Japanese Mountain. Train in bush form or allow to 
trail from pots or window boxes. Its clusters of single blooms 
are borne in the greatest profusion in many attractive shades. 
Mixed colors only. Pkt. 35c. 
Marigold, Yellow Supreme—a fitting companion 
to Guinea Gold. (See pages 14 and 23) 
WILD GARDEN FLOWERS 
If you want a riot of color all Summer, with some¬ 
thing constantly coming into bloom—like a surprise 
package—to add interest to your garden, plant one or 
both of these mixtures. They contain a big variety of 
our best flowering annuals. Many of them are suitable 
for cutting. All are admirable for filling in odd corners 
and waste places you want to make attractive at little 
outlay. We have customers who buy them year after 
year for they enjoy the ever changing picture the 
flowers provide. You can grow them with a minimum 
of care and every assurance of success. 
DAHLIA. H. H. P. 
Orchid Flowered. Throws the most unique 8-petaled single flow¬ 
ers ever seen in Dahlias. Of medium size only, but in a bewilder¬ 
ing variety of pleasing colors and combinations. 
Mixed colors only. Plrt. 50c. 
DELPHINIUM. H. P. Our most popular perennial. 
Iceberg. A handsome, pure white, growing 4 ft. tall with 20- 
inch spikes. Pkt. 25c. 
DIANTHUS. H. A. 
Splendens. Free flowering and easily grown, the Dianthus 
family has for years furnished some of our most popular 
border plants. This is a most striking novelty that ought 
to prove valuable for Midsummer blooms in the rockery 
where a bright dash of color is needed. Flowers we have 
seen are easily as big as a half-dollar in a 
brilliant shade of crimson with a large, boldly 
contrasting white eye. Pkt. 15c. 
HIBISCUS. (Mallow). H. P. 
Giant Flowered Red. Valuable for bold effects in 
tall, hardy borders. Loves moist locations. 
Pkt. 10c., V4 oz. 40c. 
LARKSPUR, Giant Imperial. H. A. 
Blue Bell. Deeper than sky-blue; decidedly up¬ 
right with long, basal-branched spikes. 
Pkt. 25c., Vb oz. 40c. 
SALVIA (Blue Salvia). H. H. P. 
farinacea, Blue Bedder. Deep blue. More dwarf 
and compact than farinacea. Best treated as 
an annual. Pkt. 25c. 
SHASTA DAISY. H. P. 
Diener’s New Giant Double White. An assort¬ 
ment of various types of double flowers rang¬ 
ing from the most double fringed sorts through 
semi-doubles to singles with beautifully curled 
and quilled petals. Pkt. 25c. 
TITHONIA (Golden Flower of the Incas). H. A. 
speciosa. Brilliant orange-vermilion single flowers resembling 
single Marigolds, but with Dahlia-like foliage. Superb for 
backgrounds. 6 to 8 ft. Pkt. 50c. 
VERBENA. H. A. 
Spectrum Red. An intense, bright red of the largest size and 
brilliance. Pkt. 25c. 
VENIDIUM (Monarch of the Veldt). H. A. 
fastuosum. Large, deep orange daisy-like flowers, each marked 
with a wide reddish-brown center ring. Fascinating in the 
garden or in bouquets. Pkt. 25c. 
ZINNIA. H. A. 
Double Mexican Hybrids (Haageana). For bedding or cut for 
bouquets these smaller flowered Zinnias possess a charm of 
their own, for many attractive colors and color combina¬ 
tions appear in this strain. Mixed colors only. Pkt. I5o. 
Early Wonder, Fiery Salmon Cerise Pink. A new race of 
dwarf, early flowering Zinnias producing masses of medium 
sized blooms on long stems that florists especially will like 
for cutting. Pkt 25c. 
Either, pkt. 20c., oz. 35c., lb. $1.25 
Perry’s Dwarf Wild Garden Mixture 
Perry’s Tall Wild Garden Mixture 
NEW! 
“Wild Flowers” 
By H. D. House 
365 Color illustrations 
$7.50, postpaid 
Because of lack of space, we have been obliged to curtail much of the information 
about the culture of these flowers, seed of which we offer for sale, but directions will be 
found on the packages themselves, directions that are sufficiently explicit for the suc¬ 
cess of which you dream—enjoyment you anticipate when you make a purchase. 
The following abbreviations are used throughout our flower seed list 
that you may have some guide as to proper treatment. 
H.H.A. Hall Hardy Annuals. 
H.A. Hardy Annuals. Seed may be sown in the open to endure ordinary weather 
to killing Autumn frosts. Sowing seed indoors or in frames will hasten 
blooming. 
H.B. Hardy Biennials. Bloom one season only. 
H.H.P. Half Hardy Perennials. 
H.P. Hardy Perennials. Should not require Winter protection. Seed should be 
sown early enough to produce husky plants before frost. Often seed 
sown indoors will bloom the first season. 
G.A. Greenhouse Annuals. Very tender. 
G.P. Greenhouse Perennials. Always kept inside. 
“SUBURBAN GARDEN” 
COLLECTION OF ANNUALS 
1 packet of each, $1.00 
For ease of culture, certainty of 
result, and sheer delight through a 
long season these flowers are 
unexcelled. 
Aster, Perry’s Prize Mixture 
Bachelor Button, Double Mixed 
Calendula, Dble. Finest Mixed 
Candytuft, Perry's Giant Mixed 
Cosmos, Single Early Mixed 
Gailiardia, Single Finest Mixed 
Gypsophila, Annual White 
Marigold, African Finest Mixed 
Mignonette, Improved Machet 
Petunia, Large-flowered Mixed 
Phlox drum. grd. Finest Mixed 
Scabiosa, Finest Mixed 
Sweet Alyssum, Little Gem 
Zinnia, Dahlia-flwd. Prize Mxd. 
