10 
PUDOR'S, INC. 
PUYALLUP, WASHINGTON 
ESCHSCHOLTZ IA “MONARCH ART SHADES” 
LIKE BEAUTIFUL ROSEBUDS 
DOUBLE CALIFORNIA POPPY “BUTTERCUP” 
DOUBLE “BUTTERCUP”. New. Beautifully fluted double deep 
buttercup yellow; very lovely; height 1 foot, see photograph. Per 
pkt. 25c; Z a oz. 40c; Z* oz. 75c. 
NEMESIA 
Family: Scrophulariaceae. Light soil; sun. 
SUTTON’S. Large flowered in beautiful color. 1 ft. Per pkt. 15c; 
2 pkts. 25c. 
HYBRIDUM “BLUE GEM”. Like a lovely forget-me-not, lovely 
border or pot plant. 6 in. Per pkt. 15c; 2 pkts. 25c. 
You miss a lot if you don’t grow Nemesias. 
NEMOPHILA 
Family: Hydrophyllaceae. Common soil. Prefers damp and shade. 
INSIGNIS (Baby Blue Eye). A lovely low growing hardy annual. 
6 in. Zz oz. 50c; (4 oz. 30c; per pkt. 10c. 
Eschscholtzia Double 
MONARCH ART SHADES 
—is entirely distinct from all other types, and has neat feathered 
foliage, above which the flowers are freely produced. 
Each bloom is large, semi-double, and of exquisite formation. 
The colors range through light rose to deep rose and carmine, and 
from deep golden yellow through all the varying tones to orange and 
scarlet. The beauty is enhanced by an almost metallic sheen which 
gives an effect of brilliance in color and substance of flower never 
before approached in the Eschscholtzia family. 
By all means have some of these beauties in your garden this 
year, they will be a revelation to you. 
FINEST MIXTURE MONARCH ART SHADES. Per pkt. 20c; 
Za oz. 50c. 
SPECIAL HYBRID MIXTURE. Containing soft pink, scarlet, 
copper red, claret and royal purple, as gorgeous as a Persian rug. 
Per pkt. 10c; Zb oz. 30c; (4 oz. 50c; i/ P oz. 90c. 
Please be specific whether you want the MONARCH ART 
SHADES or the HYBRID MIXTURE. 
THE PROBLEM OF THE EDGING PLANT 
For the past two seasons my garden has boasted what has seemed 
to me the handsomest flower edging I have ever seen, and one which 
I am afraid is going to be copied next summer in half the gardens of 
the county. I used an ounce of Alyssum seed of the variety known 
as “Carpet of Snow” and a quarter ounce of Lilac Queen. The lilac 
sort grows just enough taller than the white to give the edging a 
delightful irregularity in height, and the color softens and enlivens 
the deadness of the white, as used alone, into a pleasing tint, some¬ 
times suggesting a delicate soft gray and again a dainty pink. 
Toward fall the lilac color grows somewhat stronger than earlier, 
probably because the colored sort holds out much better than the 
white. 
Innumerable people visit my garden each season, and hardly a 
garden owner who has seen it recently but has exclaimed over this 
Alyssum edging and has asked the recipe for it. It will be used 
again this coming summer and indefinitely until the urge for a 
change seizes me, and then I suppose I shall turn to Violas or 
lobelias, for out of all the edging plants I have tried, or seen tried, 
these three come nearest the standard of perfection. (House Beauti¬ 
ful.) 
