30 
c Annual Flower Seeds 
BRECK’S 
OOOOOGOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 
Sanvitalia 
Scabiosa, Breck’s Special Mixture 
Scabiosa • Mourning Bride 
One of the most important annuals for cut-flowers, the Scabiosas or Pin- 
Cushion Flowers bloom on long, slender stems, which are exceedingly graceful. 
Pkts. 10c and 25c, unless otherwise noted 
6580 Breck’s Special Mixture. Oz.$1.50. 
6581 Blue Cockade. Deep azure-blue. 
Ptt 
6582 Cherry-Red. 
6583 Dwarf Coral-Rose. Pkt. 25c. 
6584 Flesh-Pink. 
6585 Giant Loveliness. Delicate sal¬ 
mon. Pkts. 25c and 60c. 
6586 King of the Blacks. 
6588 Lavender (Azure Fairy). 
6590 Peach Blossom. Pkts. 15c and 35c. 
6594 Rose. 
6595 Shasta. Immense, pure white 
flowers. Pkts. 15c and 35c. 
6598 Yellow. Very pale. 
66091 COLLECTION, 6 varieties for 50c. 
Schizanthus • Butter fly>¥lower 
Erect, delicately fashioned annuals, with very dainty, impossibly fragile blos¬ 
soms like miniature orchids. Valuable for pot-culture and Summer bedding. 
6614 Breck’s Excelsior Hybrids. Unsurpassed for greenhouse culture, producing 
unusually large flowers of white, buff, and rose-color, mottled and blotched like 
fancy pelargoniums. Pkts. 50c and $1.25. 
6618 Retusus. Scarlet and orange. Pkts. 15c and 35c. 
6620 Retusus albus. White with yellow blotch. Pkts. 15c and 35c. 
6622 Retusus, Pink Beauty. Exquisite rose tint. Pkt. 50c. 
6624 Wisetonensis Hybrids. Particularly adapted for house or conservatory. 
Flowers soft pink, dark brown, and intermediate shades. Pkts. 25c and 60c. 
6626 Choice Mixed. Pkts. 10c and 25c. 
Salvia splendens (Scarlet Sage) 
Salvia • Sage 
Annual bedding plants bearing long spikes of attractive 
flowers which remain in good condition for many weeks. 
Most of them should be started early. 
6548 Blue Beard. Splendid bright purple variety. Com¬ 
pact and handsome. Pkts. 15c and 35c. 
6550 Farinacea. A perennial which will bloom the first 
year from seed. Produces long, mealy blue spikes of an 
exquisite tint. Fine for cutting. Pkts. 15c and 35c. 
6551 Farinacea, Blue Bedder. An excellent form of this 
popular Salvia, slightly dwarfer and more compact. 
Flowers of a deeper blue. Pkt. 25c. 
6552 Patens. A perennial type which blooms the first year from 
seed. Flowers bright blue. Pkts. 25c and 60c. 
6554 Splendens. Well-known popular Scarlet Sage. Pkts. 10c 
and 25c. 
6556 Splendens, Bonfire. An improved Scarlet Sage, 2 feet high, 
of compact habit, with an abundance of blazing red flowers. 
Pkts. 15c and 35c. 
6560 Splendens, Zurich. A low, compact variety of Splendens, 
with long, scarlet flower-spikes. Pkts. 25c and 60c. 
6565 Procumbens fl.-pl. A superb edging and ground-cover plant, with 
handsome dark foliage and low, trailing branches. Covered through¬ 
out the season with an enormous number of tiny, double, clear yellow, 
zinnia-like flowers which last for weeks without fading. Pkts. 10c 
and 25c. 
Saponaria 
Quick-growing, half-succulent plants about a foot high which cover 
the ground quickly and produce an abundance of small, showy flowers. 
Pkts. 10c and 25c 
6571 Calabrica. Pink. 6573 Vaccaria. Pale rose. 
For Late'Season Bedding 
Bedding plants in a wide variety will be found on page 103. In¬ 
cluded in these will be found three types and colors of Salvia—- 
6551 “Blue Bedder”; 6556 “Bonfire”; and the new salmon-pink 
variety “Welwyn,” seed of which we do not offer. 
