7k NOVELTIES 
for 1935 
Dahlia, Unwin’s Dwarf 
Quilled Hybrids (ANNUAL) 
, Jh. is is the latest development in the hybrid 
bedding Dahlia. It resembles the Unwin’s Dwarf 
Bedding varieties in height, habit, and wide range 
of color, the only real difference being that the 
blooms are beautifully curled in a semi-quilled 
manner. Blooming in about 3^ months from the 
Dahlia, Unwin’s Dwarf Quilled Hybrids 
The New Double Sweet 
Wivelsfield 
Dianthus Allwoodi X Dianthus 
barbatus (Sweet William ) 
? n this form of the popular Sweet 
Wivelsfield the flowers are much larger 
and very double, in a varied and most 
beautiful range of colors, from white to 
richest crimson and shades of pink and 
many fancy shades. The habit of growth 
is very bushy and uniform, some 15 inches 
high, like a Sweet William but more 
branching. They flower continuously from 
w- ne ,^2 ,^ ct ? ber - the single Sweet 
Wivelsfield they bloom the first year in 
about four months from seed and flower 
satisfactorily for about three seasons 
Pkt. 75 cts., 3 pk ts. $2. 
4 
New Double Sweet Wivelsfield 
Spinach all summer-Schling’s Perpetual Summer Spinach. See page 81 
Begonia semperflorens 
marginata , Elegant 
ANNUAL 
A new Begonia of striking beauty. The 
flowers are large, white, with vivid edging of 
crimson, a combination of colors rendering it 
most charming. It is admirably adapted for 
edging and bedding. The plants are of bushy 
habit, medium tall, and bloom most profusely. 
Comes quite true from seed. The foliage of 
fresh green forms a lively contrast with the 
attractive color of the blooms. 
As a pot-plant one can hardly imagine a 
more exquisite variety. A border or bed of 
these lovely Begonias will be a feature in any 
garden. Pkt. 75 cts., 3 pkts. $2. 
