ORIENTAL POPPIES 
For splendor they occupy a place of their own. We have 
eliminated from our plantings all the old small-flowered and 
common orange kinds. 
Plant in neutral soil of good quality, deeply dug, where they 
are to remain. Their roots are long and brittle. 
Australia: Immense size, rich, deep carmine bowls standing 
three feet in height. This remarkable Hoodacres variety is one 
of the two Oriental Poppies which received the highest rating 
in 1933 by the judges who passed upon the entire field of avail¬ 
able kinds. $1.25 each, 3 for $3.00. 
Ethel Swete: Fine English variety, cherry-pink; a new color 
in Orientals. $1.50. 
Gray's Orange: An upstanding large orange-scarlet, very 
little black at throat; attractive. Australian production. $1.25. 
Lady Moore: Glowing salmon-pink. Keeps its color and 
blooms along with Delphiniums; remarkable color combination, 
24 in. $1.00, 3 for $2.25. 
Lord Lambourne: Deeply fringed petals, heavily blotched 
black at throat. 50c. 
Mandarin: Remarkable Chinese red, very tall and strong 
grower; rare. $1.00. 
Mrs. Stobart: A new and rare English introduction, soft old 
rose; very unusual. $1.50. 
Trilby: Another outstanding Oriental. Large shapely blos¬ 
soms of lustrous red, petals crinkled. An important feature is its 
late-blooming quality which happily extends the season. $1.50 
each. 
A WONDERFUL EXPERIENCE — SEED GERMINATION 
"I am writing to let you know how well your seeds germinated for me. 
The first of last August I planted a packet of your Complete Range seeds, 
in a carefully trenched and prepared cold-frame. I counted 176 plants in 
October when I mulched between the rows with sand. The first of Decem¬ 
ber they were covered with corn-stalks. This has been a very aggravating 
winter — first zero weather, then everything thawed entirely out, then 
froze up again. But now the little green crowns are sticking up above the 
sand. Wasn't that a wonderful experience? Almost as much fun as seeing 
a tiny baby safely through its first six months.''—Burley, Idaho. 
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