"KEEP YOUR GARDEN GROWING" 
Try New Versions of 
These Old Favorites 
ffim 
All Actual Photographs 
PEONIES - - Old and New 
LOVELY TO LOOK AT - - - EASY TO GROW 
Garden Club Peony roots are all EACH 
large, vigorous 3- to 5-eye roots. « 
Wards supplies only fresh, young J 
stock that has never been used for 
growing cut flowers. and up 
Avalanche—287 PJ 10307 (Illustrated above). Large 
compact globular rose type. Pure white with carmine 
flecks.Each root 32c 3 for 75c 
Felix Crousse—287 PJ 10308—Large compact, deep 
rose red. Very fragrant.Each root 25c 3 for 55c 
Karl Rosenfield—287 PJ 10313—Semi-rose type, in¬ 
tense crimson. Good development and perfect pro¬ 
portions rare in red Peonies. . Each root 32c 3 for 75c 
Walter Faxon—287 PJ 10314—Soft coral pink, shad¬ 
ing to deep rose at base of petals. Most highly colored 
of all double pink Peonies. A superb variety, free 
blooming and vigorous.Each root 45c 3 for $1.10 
Baroness Schroeder—287 PJ 10317—Rose type; blooms 
late. An unusual variety freely producing immense, 
flesh shaded white flowers with high centers. They last 
a long time and are distinctly fragrant. 
Each root 32c 3 for.75c 
Kelway's Queen—287 PJ 10318—Flesh pink; mid¬ 
season. Fragrant.Each root 60c 3 for $1.50 
Charles McKellipp—287 PJ 10316—Opens rose type 
and develops into crown; midseason. Rich crimson 
center petals; gold stamens; broad silky guard petals. 
Each root 35c 3 for.80c 
Primevere—287 PJ 10311—Anemone type—one of 
the prettiest. Crested center petals deep yellow, outer 
petals white.Each root 45c 3 for $1.10 
Mons. Jules Elie—287 PJ 10309—Bomb type, shell 
pink shading to rose or lilac, silvery sheen. 
Each root 25c 3 for.55c 
Marie Crousse—287 PJ 10315—Bomb type; mid¬ 
season. Soft salmon pink shading to glistening lilac. 
Each root 35c 3 for.80c 
All Roots and Bulbs Shipped Prepaid. 
BUY PEONIES BY COLOR 
Sturdy, 3 to 5-eye roots, not labeled by name. Choose 
Red, White or Pink. State Color Wanted. 
Each 3 for 5 for 10 for 
287 PJ 10319.... 20c 47c 75c $1.40 
-•- 
“The Peony is perhaps the hardiest and most re¬ 
warding of flowers, but must be planted not more than 
two inches deep and left undisturbed for years. Marie 
Crousse and Primevere are perfection when grown 
near each other and used for cutting.” 
U jtiixn 
CBAKSD MONTGOMERY WARD 9 I 
Dwarf Chrysanthemum 
PINK GLORY Each Plant 
NEW . . . UNIQUE O C r 
Pictured above is a single small ^3 *3 V 
plant entirely studded with p rep aid 
perfect, pink Chrysanthemums. 
Nothing like it was seen before 1933. An 
immediate sensation, it won immediate 
fame for its great profusion of beautiful, 
delicately colored, radiant pink flowers. 
Add a long, continued blooming season and 
perfect hardiness to the beauty of these 
flowers and you can guess at the satisfac¬ 
tion of growing this lovely variety. 
A dwarf, growing about 2 feet high and 
30 inches in diameter, in one season this 
small plant will develop into literally a 
bushel of flowers. 600 and more on one 
plant, each a perfect chrysanthemum. It 
will bloom for years unprotected. 
Like the new dwarf hardy asters this ngrw 
chrysanthemum with its pink overglow is 
a remarkable addition to the border. 
287 PJ 10849— Prepaid. 
Has sold elsewhere for $2.50 a plant. 
Each.35c 4 plants.$1.05 
2 plants..60c 6 plants. 1.50 
Pristine Tuberoses . . . 
ATTRACTIVE . . . 
FRAGRANT 
3 Bulbs 
05 c 
An old time garden flower Mm w wm 
which is returning to pub- p repa id 
lie favor. Its dazzling 
white flowers give a high light to the 
garden in midsummer and fill the air 
about them with an exotic fragrance 
for many weeks. Spikes of grass-like 
leaves grow 2 to 3 feet tall bearing 
sweet-scented, white, double flowers 
with glistening, waxen petals. 
Wards tuberoses are an extraor¬ 
dinarily fine strain, all top size 
tubers, 4 to 6 inches in circumference 
and will make larger and more perfect 
flowers than the smaller grades. 
Plant them about an inch deep in 
light fine soil. Planted in May they 
will bloom by September. Tubers 
should be taken in before frost and 
kept over winter. 
287 PJ 10302—DOUBLE FRA¬ 
GRANT TUBEROSES. 
3 bulbs.25c 6 bulbs.39c 
12 bulbs.75c 25 bulbs... $1.45 
Bleedingheart 
Dicentra Spectabilis. This 
favorite of generations of 
gardeners, swings its 
gracefully arching sprays 
in every complete garden. 
Dainty, heart-shaped 
drops of soft pink bloom 
in late spring among blue- 
gray, ornamental foliage. 
Their fragile loveliness 
provides a delightful con¬ 
trast to heavier groupings 
and is perfectly charming 
above forget-me-nots. 
Wards supplies large 
vigorous roots. They will 
grow freely in any open 
border but prefer a semi- 
shady position. 2 to 3 ft. 
287 PJ 10301 — Prepaid. 
Each Plant 3 for 
29c 80c 
Regal Lily 
E. H. Wilson’s superb 
discovery in China. Old 
rose outside, white with 
luminous yellow within. 
Delicately scented flow¬ 
ers are produced in abun¬ 
dance in June or July— 
often 9 or more blooms, 
each about 8 inches long, 
held horizontally on one 
stately stem, 3 to 5 feet 
tall. Set them 5 to 6 
inches deep in well- 
drained, well fertilized 
soil, preferably in a sunny 
location. Perfectly hardy, 
most valuable for cut¬ 
ting, and enchanting in 
the border. 
287 PJ 10304— Prepaid. 
Each bulb 3 Bulbs 
19c 52c 
LilyoftheValley 
Flourishing in dense 
shade where few other 
flowers will grow, there is 
nothing lovelier than this 
modest plant with its 
delicate stalks hung with 
fragrant flowers. 
Garden Club’s large, 
field grown clumps will 
multiply rapidly. Set 
them in part ial shade and 
space them well apart. 
They will thrive even if 
neglected, but will repay 
you handsomely for care. 
Fertilize them occasion¬ 
ally and keep them from 
overcrowding. Use them 
for covering the ground 
in shady spots, rising in 
groups from a ground 
cover of common myrtle, 
or bordering a walk. 
287 PJ 10300— Prepaid. 
Each 3 10 
clump clumps clumps 
25c 69c $ 2 1S 
Everyone is eligible for prizes in Wards 
Flower Show . . . See Rules on Page 4. 
