PAINESVILLE, OHIO 
Superior Flower Seed 25 
Forget-me-not. 
Gaillardia or 
“Blanket Flower.” 
Gypsophila Elegans— 
Annual “Baby’s Breath.” 
GODETIA 
FORGET-ME-NOT 
(Myosotis) 
Blue Bouquet. 12 inches. A compact 
pillar smothered with bright blue flow¬ 
ers. Pkt. 20c: Ya oz. 75c. 
Pink Bouquet. 12 inches. Like the 
above stricta type; flowers warm pink. 
Pkt. 20c ; Ya oz. 75c. 
*Palustris. 12 inches. Blue with white 
and yellow eyes. Pkt. 10c ; Ya oz. 25c. 
Victoria. 8 inches. Dwarf; brilliant 
azure-blue. Pkt. 10c; Ya oz. 30c. 
FOUR O’CLOCK! 
Marvell 
of PeruJ 
Bloom the first season from seed; the 
clustered flowers open in the afternoon 
and drop by morning. Its innumerable 
flowers and gorgeous diversity of colors 
furnish a great deal of cheer at little 
expense. 
Mixed. Pkt. 10c; oz. 15c; % lb. 35c; 
1 lb. $1.00. 
FOXGLOVE [Digitalis} 
The mammoth 3- to 5-ft. spikes of 
densely set colored flowers make them 
very desirable for use as backgrounds. 
Hardy biennial. 
Finest Mixed Gloxinoides. Pkt. 10c ; 
Ya oz. 20c. 
f GAILLARDIA! 
Flower ) 
♦Grandiflora. Hardy perennial, 2 feet, 
blooming first season. Flowers large 
and flat; yellow and orange, with cen¬ 
ter and varying rings of red and ma¬ 
roon shades. Mixed. Pkt. 10c. 
f*GEUM 
Mrs. Bradshaw. They closely resemble 
dark crimson Carnations with broad, 
fluted petals, and a conspicuous tuft of 
golden stamens. Hardy perennial. 1% 
feet. Pkt. 10c ; Ya oz. 30c. 
Bady Stratheden. Bright golden yel¬ 
low flowers. Pkt. 10c; Ys oz. 30c. 
Their beautiful satiny, open flowers cover¬ 
ing a wide range of colors, produce a de¬ 
lightful effect in masses or borders. They 
bear good flowers even in shaded places 
where so few flowers can be grown, and are 
better in the cooler sections, and not too rich 
soil. Hardy annuals. 1 foot. 
Finest Mixed. Pkt. 10c; Ya oz. 20c. 
GOURDS 
A tribe of tender annual climbers (10 to 
20 feet) with curiously shaped, fancifully 
patterned, hard shell fruits, which may be 
used in many practical ways. 
Larg-e Ornamental Mixed. 
Small Ornamental Mixed. 
Pkt. 10c; y 2 oz. 20c. 
t 
GYPSOPHILA 
[Baby’s Breath] 
Delicate stems and foliage in rounded 
clumps; profusely sprinkled with tiny 
star-bloom. These misty panicles are ex¬ 
quisite “mixers” with other flowers, 
either in bouquets or in the garden. 
Eleguns. Annual. To provide contin¬ 
uance of bloom should be sown several 
times. Pkt. 10c; % oz. 15c; oz. 25c. 
*Faniculata. Hardy perennial, 2 feet. 
Flowers white with a general impres¬ 
sion of being lavender when in bud. 
Pkt. 10c; Ya oz. 20c. 
fHELICHRY SUM 
[Strawflower] 
Hardy annual, 2 feet. Flowers are round, flat 
but thick, very full of short, stiff, incurving petals 
surrounding a depressed center. Their chief value 
is for winter use in baskets and vases, dried. Cut 
with long stems when about a third open, suspend 
bunch (heads down) in a cool, dry place until thor¬ 
oughly dried. We offer only the MONSTROSUM 
fl. pi., the largest and most double, with the widest 
range of color. 
Mixed. Pkt. 10c ; *4 oz. 25c. 
HELIOTROPE 
Valued for the fragrance of their flowers, and 
duration of bloom. Tender perennial, 1 foot. Easily 
grown, blooming first summer if sown early. 
Ziemoine’s Giant Hybrid. Of robust growth, and 
large flower heads, blooming all summer long. 
Choice Mixed Colors. Pkt. 10c ; Ys oz. 30c. 
f HONESTY [Lunaria biennis] 
A hardy biennial, known as Moonwort, Money, 
Peter’s Pence, and Satin Flower. The interesting 
bloom is colored in crimson, purple, or white and 
is one of unique value to brighten shady, damp 
places where there is seldom any colored bloom; but 
the large, round, flat seed pouch is what makes 
this plant so popular. It is transparent, silvery, in 
loose sprays, drying naturally so that it lasts all 
winter in dry bouquets with berries and other win¬ 
ter basket material. Sow seed in May. Cover plants 
before frost. 
Mixed. Pkt. 10c; Ya oz. 20c. 
Foxglove. 
Godetia. 
Strawflower. 
Honesty. 
