Roae 9lari« OOrill.K 
Eni'ly Blooming' 
Ko»e-l>iiik 
?he last word in tliis aniiUHl climber, Tlie liaiul- 
le rose-i)iiik double and semi-double flowers of 
new variety are strikingly beautiful, 
No. 2156, Pkt. IOC; Vi oz. 200; Vj oz.40C; oi. 60o. 
OONFLOWER 
EVERY FOURTH PACKET IS FREE % 
This exceedingly rai)id grower is one of the most beautiful of all annual climbers. These 
^s thrive best in sunny locations and i)roduce hundreds of morning-gloi y-like flowers of 
ly blue, shading down to pure white in the throat. No. 2437, Pkt. lOC; ’/« oz. 30c 
laby Blue IVIOOIMFLOWER 
Impressive As a Covering’ for Walls^ 'Trellises and 
Arbors. Flowers Produced By Hundreds 
WHITE MOONFLOWER 
[3fexicana Grandijlora Alba] 
A Beauti* 
till Aiiniial Ww 
C'limber 
Moo tjflow- 
ers are among 
the very best 
<>l vines for 
covering 
walls, trellises 
.tiicl stumps of 
trees. Til In 
«'ui*iel.y 1* 
Taut ffriiH- 
iiiir and at 
night and on cloudy days will give you an 
atmndance of large, pure white, fragrant flow- 
ei .s 5 to I) inches in diameter. 
No. 2463, Pkt. lOc; 1/2 30C; oz. SOC. 
Monkey Flower J 
A Rival III III** 
Orrlilfl In 
Reuuty 
Tlie “little mim¬ 
ic” or Monkey 
Flower is excel¬ 
lent for pots or 
lianging baskets, 
or for the moist. 
8 a n (I y. slieltei ed 
spots in the gar¬ 
den. The flowers 
are lemon, yellow, 
golden, flesh, rose, 
crimson and ma¬ 
roon, handsomely 
blotched and spotted, giving them an 
amusing monkcy-like appearance. 'I'lu-y 
will delight the children. 
No. 2177, Pkt. lOc; ‘/s 50c. 
Japanese Morning Glories 
Tlie perfec* 
t i o n o i 
M o r n i n g- 
Glories. Im¬ 
mense flow¬ 
ers, all wavy 
a n <1 fluted, 
simply mag- 
n i fi e e n t. 
T h e coloi- 
i 'n g and 
ni a r k i n gs 
lange from 
snowy white 
to dark purple, fiery led. pink, rose, car¬ 
mine, deep blue, brown and cherry. 
No. 2071. Pkt lOc; u oz. 20c. 
Giant Zanzibar Palm 
(Ricinus Zanzibariensis) 
Thi.s i.s the wonderful plant you 
Inive been seeking to beautify 
your lawn. It often grows 14 ft. 
iiigh, the enoiinous leaves meas¬ 
ure 4 feet across. It presents a 
pyramid of ti'oi)icaI-lo()king foil- 
age wliicli glows big in 4 to G 
weeks. A rare, sliowy and inter¬ 
esting plaiii for the lawn. 
No. 2020, Pkt. IOC; oz. 25c. 
NOTE:—Some folks plant thi.s 
tJiant at some distance fromtbeir 
porcb or bouse, claiming that it 
draws the motiultoes away. 
Scabiosa, An Old Garde 
Favorite 
One of tlie most useful 
ind decorative plants of 
be entire garden. The 
ong succession of richly 
•olored, fragrant tilossoms 
m long stems liiriiiuh 
you willi c*ut fl4»w«*r» 
froiii July until out 
lown b.v ti’OMt. Some- 
iiiies called “Pin Cush- 
on” because the center 
:one much resembles a 
liu cushion. For brll- 
iance of coloring this spe- 
rlally selected mixture is 
vitliout a rival. 
No. 2186, Pkt. lOc; 
/./07. 900. 
IVIosquIto Plant 
F1i»h ei'iiig: 
Auiiiinl 
IVlouriiing Bride 
IVlusR Plant 
Nasturtium 
Dwarf ' 
Double 
BOFBI^B IIYBRIB” 
Sweet Scented 
A Novelty to Show Your Friends and 
Neighbors 
(Mimulus 
Moechalos) 
The Musk 
.Scented fo¬ 
liage of this 
plant per- 
fiiines a n y 
place it may be witli a delicate odor 
of MUSK. While chiefly a foliage 
plant it bears numerous small pale 
yellow flowers. 
No. 2073. Pkt. IOC. 
** Golden Globe** 
Award of 
Merit i936. 
Identical 1 n 
color w i t li 
“ G o 1 d e n 
Gleam,” hav¬ 
ing too, the 
same well- 
f o I* m 4* «l 
d o 11 b 1 e d 
Howe r u, 
*1 e 1 ieately 
« w e e t • 
only from tlie 
famous (ioltleii Gleam in tliat II I* uiii- 
rorml.v dwarf and compact. He sure to 
have this floral gem in your garden tliis 
No. 2622 Pkt. IOC: I j OZ. 20c. 
.Nasturtiums 
These hy- 
tj r 1 d 8 a re 
c o 1 lections 
of tlie most 
go r geonsly 
colored 
flowers ever 
listed. Their 
coloi'combi¬ 
nations are 
entirely new 
and possess 
sliades nev¬ 
er before in¬ 
troduced in¬ 
to flower 
g a r d e n s. 
They blend 
perfectly witli tlieir 
are sweet-scented, 
sized proportions. 
fresh green foliage and 
growing often to giant- 
No. 2434, Pkt. lOc; oz. 20c. 
GOOD LUCK GARDENS^ PARADIS E; 
