Hart & Vick’s Retail Store is the Smartest 
Swan RlVCr Daisy (Brachycome iberidifolia) 
A dainty plant covered the entire season with white and blue flowers. May be used 
as a pot-plant or for edging beds and borders. Pkg. 10c; Vi oz. 40c; oz. $1.35, postpaid. 
Marigold, Sunset Giants 
Surprisingly large flowers, averaging about 5 inches across, with some even larger. 
They are loosely formed, full, with high centers and drooping outer petals—all com¬ 
bining to make the enormous bloom. The colors range from deep orange to golden 
orange, light yellow, lemon-yellow, golden yellow, and a shade of primrose. Plants 
grow 3V6 feet or more in height. This strain is purely an American product, developed 
from seed secured in Mexico. Pkg. 25c, postpaid. 
Marigold, Harmony 
A dwarf French Marigold that we consider very fine. In fact, the trials at our Fair- 
port gardens showed it to be far superior to the other dwarf French sorts. The plants 
are stronger growers, about a foot high, bloom earlier, and are covered with flowers until 
frost. The bloom has a deep orange center crest surrounded by a collar of dark 
maroon florets. A very desirable 
plant for borders and ribbon beds. 
Pkg. 15c ; large pkg. 30c, postpaid. 
See color picture on inside back 
cover. 
Marigold, Crown of Gold 
Marigold, Sunset Giants 
Marigold, 
Crown of Gold 
Winner of a Gold Medal in the 1937 All- 
America Seed Selections. A new and dis¬ 
tinct collarette type, the center of the 
flower resembling a chrysanthemum, with 
a broad outer collar of large, wide petals 
which droop over the calyx. The clear 
golden yellow blooms are sweetly scented 
and are produced in great freedom from 
early summer until late frosts kill the 
plants. The old unpleasant Marigold odor 
of the foliage is entirely lacking in the plants, which are branching and grow 
about 2 feet high. You surely will wish to have this newcomer blooming in your 
1937 garden. Pkg. 25c, postpaid. 
Marigold, Yellow Supreme 
A Gold Medal winner in the 1935 All-America Seed Selections, and still holds 
its high place. In general form of flower Yellow Supreme resembles Guinea Gold, 
but the color is a lovely shade of lemon-yellow. The blooms are large, carried 
on long stems, and produced until frost kills the plants. The plants are semi¬ 
dwarf, strong, and sturdy in growth, and give an abundance of flowers for cutting. 
Try it with Guinea Gold and have a pair of winners. Pkg. 15c, postpaid. 
Morning-Glory, Heavenly Blue 
No other member of the Morning-Glory family compares with Heavenly Blue. 
First of all, the vine is a rapid grower, quickly covering a trellis or porch. It 
begins to flower early in July and continues to bloom for weeks. The blooms are 
really enormous, measuring 3 to 4J^, or even 5, inches across, and are borne so 
freely that no one would attempt to count them. The color, however, is the chief 
charm. This is best described as a rich sky-blue (see color picture on inside back 
cover), shading to pure white in the throat. The color combination is as lovely 
as a summer sky flecked with fleecy white clouds. Plants thrive best in full open 
sun, do not require rich soil, but do like a reasonable amount of moisture. We are 
sure you will be as enthusiastic about Heavenly Blue as we are. Pkg. 15c; V4 oz. 
40c; 1/2 oz - 70c; oz. $1.25, postpaid. 
Now It's a New 
Zinnia, 
Early Wonder 
Gypsy 
This new Zinnia caught the 
eye of every visitor to our Trial- 
Grounds last summer. The color, 
a rich burnished orange, is as gay 
as a gypsy maid’s gown. It 
sparkles and glistens and shines 
in a most bewitching fashion. A 
vase of bloom makes a superb 
living-room decoration. The 
plant grows about 18 inches tall, 
bears scores of double flowers on 
long stems, and blooms in 30 to 
40 days from seed. Pkg. 25c, 
postpaid. (For other Zinnias, 
see page 34.) 
Marigold, Harmony 
