ANNUAL AND PERENNIAL FLOWER SEEDS 
ORNAMENTAL GOURDS 
Ornamental Gourds are easily grdwn in rich soil, where 
they will produce plenty of fruits. They may be trained on 
trellises and the ripened fruits used for ornaments. 
Small Mixed. 
Large Mixed. 
GYPSOPHILA, Baby's Breath 
Pretty, free-flowering annuals and perennials. Their misty 
white panicles are largely used for mixing with other cut 
flowers. 
Elegans grandiflora alba. This is an improved, large-flower¬ 
ing, pure white form of the annual Baby’s Breath. 
Elegans grandiflora rosea. Delicate rose. 
Panieulata. Hardy perennial. White. Blooms first year if 
sown early. Height, 2 feet. 
HELIANTHUS, Sunflower 
Well known and popular plants, the small flowering sorts 
being useful for cutting. The tall varieties are valuable for 
backgrounds. 
Cut-and-Conie-Again. Single golden yellow flowers with 
petals twisted like a Cactus Dahlia. (Small flowered sort.) 
Russian Mammoth. Immense single yellow flowers on tall 
heavy stalks. 6 feet. 
HELICHRYSUM, Straw Flower 
The finest of all Everlastings for the home garden. They 
are very handsome when growing in the open and make 
unusually fine Winter bouquets if cut when partially opened 
and dried slowly in a cool place, heads downward to keep 
the long stems straight. The centers of the double pompon¬ 
like flowers are nearly covered by the stiff overlapping petals. 
They come in a wide range of brilliant and soft colors. 
Finest Mixed. 
HELIOTROPE 
IPOMOEA, Morning Glory 
Climbers of rapid growth, with beautiful and varied flow¬ 
ers. For covering walls, trellises, arbors, or stumps of trees 
they are invaluable. 
Clark’s Mammoth Blue. A variety that is bringing new popu¬ 
larity to Morning Glories. It is an early blooming climber, 
literally covered with lovely flowers of sky-blue. Flowers 3% 
inches across and blooms until frost. Pkt. 15c. 
Rose Marie. Double. Rose-pink, double and semi-double 
flowers. A fitting companion to the Heavenly Blue. 
Mixed Imperial Japanese. These are beyond question the 
handsomest of all Morning Glories. The flowers are of gi¬ 
gantic size and their colorings beyond description. 
LANTANA 
A Brazilian shrub that makes a splendid display the first 
season from seed. Above the large somber green leaves 
Verbena-like clusters of fragrant flowers rise in prolonged 
succession. In a single cluster all the shades of crimson, 
rose, yellow, and orange appear. 
Hybrida Mixed. 
LARKSPUR, Annual 
Annual Delphiniums are adorned with finely cut, feathery 
foliage of soft green which sets off to advantage the hand¬ 
some long floral spikes of double blossoms. The colors are 
very satisfying for they range from pure white through soft 
shades of lavender and pink to deep blue. 
New Rosamond, Stock Flowered Strain. Gold Medal Winner, 
All-America Selections, 1934. Acclaimed the most distinct 
introduction. The color is a new bright rose that holds well 
until out of bloom. Blooms two weeks earlier than others; 
exceptionally uniform, bearing numerous good spikes. 
Giant Imperial White King. See page 3. 
Giant Imperial Coral King. See page 3. 
A well known and highly prized plant on account of the 
delightful fragrance of the flowers. Seed started indoors in 
the Spring will make fine plants for Summer blooming. Can 
also be sown outdoors in May. Excellent for pots, or for 
bedding. 18 inches. 
Choice Mixed. 
HOLLYHOCK 
TALL DOUBLE STOCK FLOWERED. The following va¬ 
rieties with lateral branches are quite spreading, but they 
produce many fine spikes. 
Sky Blue. Pink. 
Dark Blue or Purple. White. 
Lustrous Carmine. Mixed. 
One of the most popular of hardy garden plants. The 
beautiful color effects produced by the planting of these 
flowers, combined with their dignified and stately appearance, 
render them indispensable for either the old-fashioned garden 
or the well planned herbaceous border. 
Single Annual, Finest Mixed. 
Double, Finest Mixed. 
GIANT IMPERIAL. This newer form produces plants of 
erect habit, branching from the base, affording longer stems 
for cutting. 
Blue Bell. Azure blue. 
Blue Spire. Very deep violet blue. 
Lilac Spire. Exquisite lilac color. 
Los Angeles Improved. Brilliant pink on salmon. 
HUNNEMANNIA, Yellow Tulip Poppy 
Seed sown early in May will, by the middle of July, pro¬ 
duce plants covered with their large buttercup yellow, poppy¬ 
like blossoms, and are never out of flower until hard frost. 
The plants grow 2 feet high and are quite bushy, with beauti¬ 
ful feathery foliage. 
Sunlite. Award of Merit, All-America 
Selections. Semi-double, canary yellow. 
White King. Pure white. 
Finest Mixed. 
IBERIS (See Candytuft) 
ICELAND POPPY 
(See Poppy Nudicale) 
ORNAMENTAL GOURDS 
ESCHSCHOLTZIA HYBRIDS 
HUNNEMANIA SUNLITE 
SPRAY FLOWERS AND ROSES OFTEN TO AVOID DISEASES 
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