The STORRS & HARRISON CO. 
24 Superior Flower Seed 
Shasta Daisy, 
Cynoglossum Amabile. 
Blue Lace Flower. 
“Snow-on-the-Mcuntain” 
California Poppy. 
CYNOGLOSSUM 
(Chinese Forget-Me-Not) 
Amahile. A recent introduction from 
China, becoming very popular. Strong 
plants 18 to 24 inches high, giving an 
all summer’s profusion of sweet 
scented, intensely blue forget-me-not¬ 
like flowers in large sprays. 
Pkt. 10c; % oz. 20c. 
fDAHLIA 
Half hardy perennial. 2 to 4 ft. Popu¬ 
lar late summer and fall flowering plants. 
The double type will bloom first season if 
sown by April 1st, but sowing the singles 
may be deferred as late as June. 
Double Mixed. Finest double flowers, 
including the new, large flowered va¬ 
rieties. Pkt., 10c; % oz., 25c. 
Unwin’s Dwarf Hybrids. Made fa¬ 
mous by the great bed on exhibition 
at the Century of Progress. Plants 
dwarf, stems long and wiry, flowers 
single and semi-double in several col¬ 
or shades. Produced 90 days from seed. 
Mixed. Pkt. 15c. 
DATURA 
(Angel’s Trumpet) 
Showy large branching plants, grow¬ 
ing 2 to 3 feet high, bearing creamy 
white, trumpet-shaped flowers 6 inches 
in length, with a wide bell. They make 
a fine sub-tropical effect in the garden 
if given light rich soil and a sheltered 
sunny location. Pkt., 10c. 
j *SHASTA DAISY 
The pure white flowers with yellow 
centers are 3 to 4 inches in diameter, 
with waxy petals mostly broad and flat. 
They bloom the entire season and fur¬ 
nish an unfailing supply of cut flowers, be¬ 
sides being a conspicuous and popular white 
border plant. Hardy perennial. 1% to 2 ft. 
Pkt. 10c; % oz. 40c. 
^ENGLISH DAISY 
(Beilis Ferennis) 
A favorite dwarf perennial, the 6-inch 
plant providing a vast amount of short¬ 
stemmed bloom through the spring and 
summer. Extensively used as edging plants, 
and usually carry over if winter mulched. 
Maxima Double Mixed. Various pink 
and white shades. Pkt. 10c; % oz. 40c. 
EUPHORBIA 
Varipvata (Snow-on-the-Mountain). 
*ai icgdid An oJd garden f avor ite; fo¬ 
liage and flowers veined and heavily mar¬ 
gined white. 2 to 3 feet. A good alternat¬ 
ing plant with pink geraniums, or sur¬ 
rounded by petunias. 
Pkt. 10c; % oz. 20c. 
Dimorphotheca—“African Daisy.” 
DIMORPHOTHECA 
(The African Daisy) 
Daisy-like flowers in great profusion nearly 
all summer, if given a sunny location. Good 
bedder, plants 12 to 15 inches high. Col¬ 
ors range through red, blue, pink, yel¬ 
low and white, with intermediate tints. 
Mixed. Pkt. 10c ; % oz. 25c. 
DIDISCUS COERULEUS 
(Blue Dace Flower) 
Seed sown outdoors after danger from 
frost, should insure bloom continuously 
from July to October. The much- 
branched plants grow to about 2 feet, 
with subdivided foliage. The terminal 
flower umbels average close to 3 inches 
across, a lacy association of long thin 
tubes and flaring faces in the numerous 
florets. The entire flower is an appealing 
shade of “heavenly” blue, and its con¬ 
struction exquisitely dainty. 
Pkt., 10c; y 8 oz., 20c. 
ESCHSCHOLTZIA 
or California Poppy 
California’s state flower. Dwarf plants 
about 1 foot high, with spreading, sil¬ 
very, fine cut foliage; furnishing a lib¬ 
eral quantity of poppy-like flowers from 
spring until late fall. In addition to the 
original yellow, the class is now enriched 
by various color shades. Border plants 
or masses. Hardy annuals. 
Sunlight. An attractive semi-double 
form of the Mexican Tulip Poppy. 
These tulip-shaped flowers, with their 
extra band of petals, give the appear¬ 
ance of being open at all times. 2 feet. 
Pkt. 15c ; % oz. 30c. 
Golden West. Large overlapping pet¬ 
als ; shining yellow, with orange 
blotch. Pkt. 10c ; % oz. 20c. 
Mixed Eschscholtzia. All varieties, 
rich in shades of pink, crimson, and 
orange-scarlet. 
Pkt., 10c ; % oz., 15c; % oz., 25c. 
English Daisy. 
