HEDDEWIGII LACINIATUS DOUBLE MIXED (Japan). Su¬ 
perb flowers rivaling the Carnation in size and doubled 
blossoms. Excellent for boupuets. Pkt. 10c 
HEDDEWIGII SINGLE MIXED. Large finely marked flowers 
having fringed petals; Pkt. 10c. 
DELPHINIUM (p) 
One of the greatest charms of hardy Larkspurs is in their 
shades of blue whcih range from soft rosy lavender to violet 
and deepest indigo. The dwarfs are valuable in the border 
while the magnificent tall varieties are stately and bautiful 
ing front of a shrubbery background. Above the deeply cut 
dark green leaves rise long floral spikes. Height, 1 to 8 
feet. 
DELPHINIUM. (See inside front cover.) 
TALL HYBRIDS. Handsome sorts adapted to backgrounds. 
Plants grown from early sown seed will flower late the first 
season, but reach their full development the second year 
and thereafter. Height, 5 feet. 
BELLADONNA. A delightful shade of silvery blue. Pkt. 15c. 
BELLAMOSUM. Rich, deep and intense blue. Pkt. 15c. 
BLACKMORE and LANGDON HYBRIDS. Latest and highest 
development of the Hollyhock type of Delphinium. Very 
large single, semi-double, and double flowers. All the paste! 
shades from very lighf blue to indigo. Pkt. 25c. 
Clarkia, Elegans 
COSMOS (a) 
No garden is complete without Cosmos. These old fav¬ 
orites supply a gorgeous, colorful effect during late Surn- 
mer and Fall. Fine for cutting as the flowers last well in 
water, Cosmos are easy to grow. 
COSMOS, SENSATION PINKIE. (See page 16.) 
COSMOS, SENSATION PURITY. (See page 16.) 
EARLY KLONDYKE ORANGE FLARE. Grand Champion 
Gold Medal, All-America Selections, 1935. The long 
stemmed flowers of bright vivid orange are freely borne on 
2 to 3 foot plants. Its most remarkable feature, however, 
is its early blooming habit. It blooms from mid-summer 
unfil frosf. Pkt. 10c. 
ERLY SINGLE. Grows 5 feet tall and blooms several weeks 
before the late-flowering varieties. Flowers 3 inches across. 
Mixed. Pkt. 10c. 
EARLY DOUBLE CRESTED. Showy plants, 3 to 4 feet tall, 
covered with a mass of lovely, large flowers. Our strain 
produces a large percentage of double blooms. 
EARLY DOUBLE, mixed. Pkt. 15c. 
CYPRESS VINE (See Ipomoea Quamoclit) 
DIANTHUS, Pinks (a) 
A charming class of annual flowers for beds, borders, edg¬ 
ings, and cutting. The dwarf, rather compact plants average 
1 foot in height. Of easiest culture, succeeding in ordinary 
garden loam. Blooms from July until frosts. 
LACINIATUS SPLENDENS. Free flowering and easily grown, 
neat and compact in habit, bearing generous quantities of 
its large, sweet scented single flowers of brilliant crimson, 
with a white eye. Pkt. 15c. 
Cosmos, Sensation White 
Digitalis 
DIDISCUS, Blue Lace Flower (a) 
An upright, very much-branched plant about 2 feet high. 
Each branch ends in an umbel of sky-blue flowers. It is easily 
grown and a splendid cut flower, lasting unusually log in 
water. Seed may be sown outdoors in a well prepared soil. 
COERULEUS BLUE. Pkt. 10c. 
DIGITALIS, Foxglove (b) 
This ornamental hardy plant is used extensively for nat¬ 
uralizing in shrubbery borders and along the edges of woods. 
It grows well under almost all conditions, giving a wealth 
of bloom during June and July. Height, 4 to 6 feet. 
GLOXINIAEFLORA. This is an improved strain of the or¬ 
dinary Foxglove, with handsome spotted Gloxinia-like flow¬ 
ers on long spikes. Mixed Colors. Pkt. 10c. 
UNWIN'S DWARF HYBRID DAHLIAS GROWN FROM SEED ARE EXCELLENT 
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