28 
R. L. Gould & Co. Seedsmen Since 1898 St. Paul, Minn, 
Mignonette Reseda 
A well known fragrant plant. Can also 
be grown indoors, in pots for winter 
use. Sowings made in April and again 
in July will keep up a succession of 
bloom from early summer until frost. 
Grows 10 to 16 inches high. 
Sweet Scented. The old-fashioned va¬ 
riety with small spikes, but the most 
sweetly scented of all. Pkt. 5c; Ya oz. 
15c; 1 oz. 25c. 
Special Mixture Large Flowering Sorts. 
Pkt. 5c. 
Nasturtium, Dwarf Double Golden 
Globe 
Golden Gleam. The large, golden-yel¬ 
low flowers average two and one-half 
to three inches across. They are borne 
on erect stiff stems six inches in 
length. Pkt. 5c; oz. 15c. 
Scarlet Gleam. The flowers are a fiery 
orange scarlet, blooms almost 3 inches 
across, and very fragrant. Pkt. 5c; oz. 
15c. 
Mahogany Gleam. Dark mahogany red. 
Pkt. 5c; oz. 15c. 
Cerise Gleam. Beautiful salmon cerise. 
Pkt. 5c; oz. 15c. 
Salmon Gleam. Similar to Golden and 
Scarlet excepting color which is a deli¬ 
cate golden salmon. Pkt. 5c; oz. 15c. 
Gleam Hybrids. Are a collection of 
gorgeously colored, large double flow¬ 
ers of dazzling beauty in colors of 
salmon, golden yellow, orange scarlet, 
cerise, cream yellow, orange crimson, 
and gold flushed scarlet. Pkt. 5c; oz. 15c. 
Dwarf Double Golden Globe. Identical 
in color with the popular Golden 
Gleam. Uniformly dwarf and compact. 
It is very free flowering, and the well 
formed double flowers of deep golden 
yellow are very sweet scented. Pkt. 5c. 
Dodgers Dwarf Double Gem Mixture. 
Plants are dwarf and compact, totally 
without runners. The good-sized sweet 
scented double flowers cover the plants 
in an excellent color range. Makes an 
ideal plant for border and edging use. 
Pkt. 5c. 
Mimosa (Sensitive Plant) 
A curious and interesting annual with 
pinkish white flowers. Leaves close 
and droop when touched or shaken. 1% 
feet high. Pkt. 10c. 
Nemesia 
These bushy plants grow only 6 to 8 
Inches high but bear continuously, 
brilliantly colored flowers of red, 
orange, crimson, cream, scarlet and 
rose lipped with other colors. Does 
best in cool situation and partial shade. 
Compacta. Mixed colors. Pkt. 10c. 
Nemophila (Baby Blue Eyes) 
A splendid annual 6 to 12 inches high 
of easy culture. Flowers all summer 
if planted in cool, shaded locations. 
Insignia Blue, 6 in. Pkt. 5c. 
Nicotiana (Tuberose Flowered Tobacco) 
Delightfully sweet-scented, tubular 
flowers, blooming continually from 
July to October. Grows 2 to 3 feet 
high. Do well in partly shaded places. 
Affinis. Crimson, pink, white or in 
mixed colors. Pkt. 5c. 
Crimson King. Dark crimson. Pkt. 5c. 
Nierembergia Hippomanica 
A most charming plant, 5 to 6 inches 
tall, with lovely lavender blue flowers, 
heightened by a touch of yellow in the 
center. Blooms 15 weeks from seeding, 
until heavy frost. Likes full sun. Ex¬ 
tremely beautiful in the rockery, win¬ 
dow box, flower pot or border. Has a 
spread of 8 to 10 inches. A half hardy 
perennial. Pkt. 35c. 
Nigella (Love-in-a-Mist) 
A compact free-flowering plant of 
feathery foliage, with curious looking 
flowers and seed pods of easy culture, 
growing well in any garden soil. It is 
a hardy annual, about 15 to 20 inches 
high. Flowers are light blue or white. 
Blooms all summer. Mixed. Pkt. 5c. 
Oenothera 
(Evening Primrose) 
Plant 1 to 2 feet 
high. Produce con¬ 
tinuously large 
single Poppy-like 
flowers of rose, yel¬ 
low. white, etc. 
Blossoms open 
towards evening 
and last well into 
the next day. Likes 
a sunny location. 
Lamarckiana. Yel¬ 
low, large flowered, 
very showy. 1 to 2 
ft. Blooms June to 
Oenothera. August. Pkt. 5c. 
Phacelia (California Blue Bell) 
An attractive and easily grown annual 
about 8 inches high, loosely branching 
with rich blue flowers. Blooms very 
early. Very effective for edgings, also 
a fine pot-plant. Campanularia. Pkt. 5c. 
Pansies 
Plant in a shady situation and give 
plenty of moisture and fertilizer. Pick 
faded blooms so they do not go to seed. 
Plants about 6 in. 
PANSY CULTURE. The seed may be 
sown indoors in February or March; 
or In Spring in the open ground, in a 
shady, cool spot where the plant can 
be protected from the strong mid-day 
sun. Pansies should be classed more 
as a biennial and seed sown every year. 
Pansies should be In every garden. 
Engelmann’s Giant. This early flowering 
giant strain contains a great variety of 
both dark and light shades; all of the 
five blotched type. Pkt. 15c. 
Gould’s Reliable Pansy Mixture. Flow¬ 
ers of large size, good form and sub¬ 
stance, and pleasing range of shades 
and colors. Pkt. 10c. 
Gould’s Fancy Bedding Pansy Mixture. 
A mixture of many sorts which are ad¬ 
mirably adapted for beds or borders. 
They are very hardy and free-blooming. 
Pkt. 5c; 1/16 oz. 50c; Ya oz. 75c. 
Phlox, Annual 
Drummond!. For beds and massing, 
nothing can surpass these beautiful 
annuals. They produce immense truss¬ 
es of large brilliant flowers through¬ 
out the summer. Seed may be started 
indoors or sown in the open ground 
any time after danger of frost is past, 
and in a very few weeks they will be 
aglow with brilliant coloring and re¬ 
main so until killed by frost. Plants 
grow 12 to 15 inches high. Crimson,- 
Flesh, Pink, Rose Dark Eye, Scarlet, 
Violet, Yellow, White, or mixed. Pkt. 
5c. 
Star. Of dwarf habit with very pretty 
star-shaped flowers. Grows about 12 
inches high. Mixed colors. Pkt. 5c. 
Nana Compacta Dwarf. Fine for rib¬ 
bon bedding or borders. The plants 
grow very symmetrical in neat little 
bushes, covered with flowers all sum¬ 
mer and fall. Grows only 6 to 8 inches 
high. Mixed, all colors. Pkt. 10c. 
Mignonette. 
Mimulus 
Mosehatus (Musk Plant). Trailing plant 
for damp shady places. Fine for rock¬ 
ery. Small yellow flowers. 6 inches. 
Pkt. 10c. 
Tigrinus (Monkey Flower.) Dwarf 
bushy plants 1 foot high with large 
Gloxinia-like flowers of white, yellow, 
gold, pink, red and maroon. Does best 
in partial shade. 12 inches. Pkt. 10c. 
Nasturtiums 
The maximum of bloom is produced in 
dry, gravelly or sandy soil. Water 
freely until plants are established. It 
is best to pick the blossoms almost 
daily. Dwarf varieties grow to a 
height of 12 to 15 inches; the tall, 6 
to 10 feet. 
Reliable Dwarf mixed varieties. Pkt. 
5c, oz. 10c, *4 lb. 35c. 
Lobb’s Climbing, mixed colors. Pkt. 5c, 
oz. 10c, % lb. 35c. 
Reliable Tall mixed varieties. Pkt. 5c, 
oz. 10c, y 4 lb. 35c. 
Double Nasturtium, Sweet Scented 
Orange Gleam. Flowers are very large, 
uniformly double and profusely free 
flowering, while the color is a deep 
glowing golden orange, with a deeper 
shading at the center. Plants are 
semi-dwarf, bearing the flowers well 
above the light green foliage on long 
wiry stems. Pkt. 5c; oz. 15c. 
Phlox Drummondl 
Gigantea Art 
Shades. A new 
strain of Phlox 
Drummondi (win¬ 
ner of 1938 Award 
of Merit in the All- 
America selections) 
with florets an inch 
and a quarter in 
diameter. In addi¬ 
tion to its enor¬ 
mous flowers it has 
a most wonderful 
range of color in 
soft art shades. 
Plants about nine 
inches high. Pkt. 
10c. 
Phlox Drummondi 
Gigantea Salmon Glory. Awarded All- 
America Silver Medal in 1939. Has soft 
but rich salmon-pink florets with wide 
creamy-white eyes. A prolific bloomer. 
Pkt. 25c. 
