22 BEAUTIFY YOUR HOME WITH FLOWERS 
UNION SEED & FUEL CO. 
LOBELIA (Crystal Palace) 
Plants of dwarf compact growth, bearing a profusion of deli¬ 
cate blue flowers. In bloom through the summer and autumn. 
Height 6 inches. Half hardy annual. Pkt. 10c. 
MOURNING BRIDE (Scabiosa or Sweet Scabious) 
An old-fashioned but most attractive flower. Desirable for 
cutting as well as for beds and borders. Flower heads about 
2 inches across; florets double, surrounding the thimble-shaped 
cone. Pkt. 10c. 
MOONFLOWER (Ipomoea Mexicana) 
One of the most rapid of summer climbers. One plant will 
cover with a dense mass of leaves a trellis 30 feet high and 6 
feet wide. Beautiful, wax-like flowers open at night and on 
cloudy days. The seed has a very hard shell and should be 
filed before planting. Tender annual. Pkt. 10c. 
NASTURTIUMS 
Double Golden Gleam. Sweet-scented Nasturtium. A new 
creation received with enthusiasm by all flower lovers. Blooms 
are of intense golden yellow color, splendid for the garden and 
peerless for cutting because of the striking color and fra¬ 
grance. Pkt. 10c; oz. 20c; 6 oz. $1.00. 
Tall Nasturtiums. Usually used for arbor or trellis plant¬ 
ing, but do equally well for mass planting without supports. 
On a trellis they will grow to a height of 6 to 10 feet. Oz. 10c; 
pkt. 5c. 
Dwarf Nasturtiums. The dwarf varieties are excellent for 
borders, along paths, and for pot culture. They grow to be 
about a foot high and are in constant bloom. Oz. 10c; pkt. 5c. 
Bodgers’ Double Glorious Gleam Hybrids. Finest mixed. 
The flowers are fine, large, well balanced, sweet scented 
doubles of the same type as the well known Golden Gleam. 
Many colors are represented. Pkt. 10c; oz. 20c. 
GIANT PANSIES 
They flourish in a cool, rich, moist soil and a situation that 
protects them from the cutting winds as well as the bright 
sun. To get the best results, pansies should be sown in July 
or August and protected with a cold frame, soft hay or 
manure. The seed may also be sown indoors in January or 
February, or in the spring in the open ground. 
Extra Fine Bedding Pansies Mixed. These are valuable for 
making beds where the size of the individual flower does not 
count much. They are of stocky growth, and the plants are 
covered with blooms during the entire summer. They flower 
profusely from seed sown in the open early in the spring. 
Our mixture contains a remarkably large number of different 
colors. Pkt. 10c. 
Mastodon Miracle Mixed Pansies. Immense and well-shaped 
flowers with thick and well-waved petals. Includes everything 
Jrom pure white to deep mahogany. The very fine lavender, 
rose, cerise, and light blue shades deserve special mention 
Pkt. 25c. 
PETUNIA 
Petunias are unsurpassed for massing in beds. They are 
also used along walks and driveways and are often grown in 
window boxes. Their richness of color, duration of bloom and 
easy culture will always make them popular. In some strains 
the flowers are very large, measuring 4 to 5 inches across; in 
others, they are deeply fringed; still others have star-like 
markings radiating from the throat and extending nearly or 
quite to the outer margin of the blossom; again, others have 
full, double flowers. The colors range from white to deep 
red-purple and are variously striped and blotched. 
Single Flowering Bedding Varieties, pkt. 10c. 
Dreer’s Superb Double Fringed Petunia. Said to be one of 
the finest strains in the world producing a large percentage 
of double flowers very large and deep fringed in many bright 
colors. Pkt. 50c. 
Dreer’s Balcony Blue. Velvety indigo blue. Pkt. 20c. 
Dreer’s Balcony Rose. Brilliant rose pink. Pkt. 20c. 
Dreer’s Balcony Crimson. Rich velvety crimson. Pkt. 20c. 
Dreer’s Balcony Mixed. Containing all colors. Pkt. 15c. 
Elks’ Pride. Rich royal purple. Pkt. 20c. 
Rosy Morn. Soft rose pink blooms, white throat. Pkt. 15c. 
PHLOX DRUMMONDI (Large Flowering) 
The plants are hardy bush-like annuals with many broad 
flat-topped clusters of nearly round and star-shaped flowers. 
They are of easiest culture and bloom profusely through a 
long season. Pkt. 10c. 
PINKS (Dianthus) 
Seed sown out of doors when danger of frost is past will 
produce plants that bear flowers in a few weeks time. Bloom 
constantly from July until frost and if covered, will bloom 
again the second season. Dianthus Chinensis (Double China), 
mixed, pkt. 10c. 
PORTULACA 
Sometimes called Moss Rose. Few flowers make such a 
dazzling display of color in the bright sunshine as a bed of 
Portulacas. Desirable also for edgings. They are in bloom 
through a long season. Pkt. 10c. 
SINGLE AND DOUBLE POPPIES MIXED 
A fine collection of the best annual varieties. Plant these 
in a mass or row and you will get a beautiful effect. Pkt. 10c. 
SHIRLEY POPPIES 
Splendid strain of annual poppies of the greatest of color. 
The flowers range from pure white to maroon with all inter¬ 
mediate shadings and all combinations imaginable. Of easy 
culture and free bloomers. Pkt. 10c. 
ICELAND POPPY 
These are hardy perennials which will flower the first year 
from seed. The foliage is fern-like, the plants of neat, com¬ 
pact growth and send up slender stalks about 12 inches high 
bearing brilliantly colored flowers. If the flowers are picked 
daily the plants will bear all season. They will continue to 
bear from year to year. Pkt. 10c. 
ORIENTAL POPPY 
For brilliancy of color there is nothing that quite equals the 
Oriental Poppy. The flowers are of enormous size, often 6 
inches in diameter and the colors range from soft pink to 
dazzling scarlet and deep maroon. Especially adapted to mass 
planting and in hardy borders with shrubs or other peren¬ 
nials. The seed should be sown in the early spring in the open 
ground. The plant disappear during July and August, appear¬ 
ing again as soon as weather gets cool. The plants will in¬ 
crease in size from year to year. Pkt. 10c. 
CALIFORNIA POPPY 
The true golden yellow strain. This is the state flower of 
California. Pkt. 10c. 
California Mixed. An excellent mixture producing deep yel¬ 
low, creamy white, scarlet and orange flowers. Pkt. 5c. 
SALVIA (Flowering Sage) 
Blooms are borne in long spikes well above the foliage and 
are of fiery red, crimson, continuing in flower a long time. 
The densely filled flower spikes are often 8 to 10 inches long 
and include 30 or more tube-like florets, 1 to 2 inches in 
length. Pkt. 10c. 
SALPIGLOSSIS 
Flowers of the richest colors—blue, crimson, yellow, purple, 
scarlet, etc., with texture like rich velvet; each petal beauti¬ 
fully penciled. Splendid for bouquets. Height 2 feet. Mixed 
colors, pkt. 10c. 
