NEW FLOWERS 
for Your 1939 Garden 
ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS FOR 1939 are designated 
thus: 
Gold Medal, the highest possible award. 
Silver Medal (heretofore called Award ot .Merit). 
Bronze Medal (replaces “Special Mention”). 
Honorable Mention (formerly called Recommended). 
IPOMOEA, Cornell. 
Similar to the new Morning Glory, Scarlett 
O’Hara, in foliage and growth, the flowers set off 
the rich deep red with a definite margin of white. 
The name was chosen in honor of Cornell Uni¬ 
versity, the colors of which are crimson and 
white. Pkt., 15c. 
New Deep Red Morning Glory, Scarlet O’Hara 
Packet, 25c 
IPOMOEA, Scarlett O’Hara. Gold Medal. 
A distinctly new color and type in Morning 
Glories, with carmine-red, three-inch flowers which 
remain open into the afternoons. Foliage is in¬ 
teresting and attractive, with one large and two 
small side lobes. Although a climber, Scarlett 
O’Hara is not rampant and it is advisable to help 
it start twining. Seed is scarce; order early. 
Pkt., 25c. 
HOLLYHOCK, Annual, Indian Spring. Silver Medal. 
Blooming in 5 months from seed, and giving a 
second crop of flowers after the main stalks have 
been cut, Indian Spring seems destined to return 
hollyhocks to the forefront of popular garden 
flowers. The large semi-double, fringed blossoms 
are in shades of rose-pink, freely produced on 
5-foot stems on compact, pyramidal plants. See 
illustration, front cover. Pkt., 25c. 
PETUNIA, Hollywood Star. Silver Medal. 
A new and beautiful type of “star” petunia, the 
edges of each flower deeply laciniated to form a 
five-pointed star. Color is bright rose-pink with a 
yellow throat. Plants are semi-dwarf and bloom 
profusely. Pkt., 25c. 
PETUNIA, Ladybird. Bronze Medal. 
Dwarf compact plants, covered with extremely 
brilliant flowers of carmine-pink overlaid with 
scarlet. A companion to Rosy Morn and Rose of 
Heaven, but of a more arresting color, you will 
enjoy a bed or border of Ladybird. Pkt., 25c. 
