IPOMEA, Scarlett O'Hara 
Gold Medal, All-America Selectionc 1939 
Scarlett O'Hara is an entirely new color in the popular Morning 
Glories—rich dark wine red or deep rosy crimson. Flowers are 
about 4 inches in diameter, freely produced on fast growing vines 
which start blooming within 65 days after seed is sown and are 
very showy for covering a fance or trellis. The dark green foliage 
does not make a very heavy growth, leaving the plants graceful 
in appearance. Pkt. 25c. 
ASTER EARLY GIANT WILT-RESISTANT, Light Blue 
Silver Medal, All-America Selections 1939 
Of the same excellent early blooming, semi-tall basal branched, 
non-lateral type. Light Blue is a very worthy companion to its 
sister variety, Peach Blossom. Both are fully wilt-resistant, ex¬ 
tremely large flowered and most attractive colors. The color is a 
rich light blue, a shade which blends in beautifully with either 
deeper or lighter tones. Pkt. 25c. 
ANNUAL HOLLYHOCK, INDIAN SPRING 
Silver Medal, All-America Selections 1939 
Flowering in 5 months from seed, the compact pyramidal plants 
to 6 feet tall; its many flowered branches produce a continuous 
show of semi and double flowers of bright rose and rosy carmine 
until frost. Sow fall or early spring. Pkt. 25c. 
SALVIA SPLENDENS, Ball of Fire 
Early flowering, the vivid flowers on compact plants, the most 
dwarf of all scarlet Salvias, it was a sensations in England last 
summer. Sow indoors, February-April, or in open after all frost 
danger is past. Pkt. 25c. 
