3 Annual Flower Novelties 
-QnnuaL 'TLowet A/oveLtle$ 
Marigolds of Unusual Form and Beauty 
To Provide the Gold and Maroon for your 1940 Garden 
Gigantea Marigolds 
1358 SUNSET GIANTS. Flowers measure 4 to 5 
inches across. Gigantic, showy and fragrant, 
they come in a grand mixture of colors from deep 
orange through golden-yellow, to a delightful 
shade of primrose-yellow. Plants extremely strong 
growing, producing 6 to 8 branches of 3 to 6 
flowers each. See color plate Page 39. Pkt. 
15c; ^ oz. 30c. 
1388 ORANGE SUNSET. This deep rich lively 
orange shade from the Sunset Giants has been the 
most admired shade in that mixture since it was 
introduced. It has now been segregated so that 
you may now grow this color separately. The 
flowers are the same giant double wavy petalled 
blooms of the parent and just as freely produced. 
Pkt. 15c. 
Harmony Double French 
1376 DWARF HARMONY. This little beauty is a 
wonder in the garden as well as in the house as a 
cut-flower. The flowers are about 1 H inches across. 
Center is orange-yellow with deep, tubular petals 
that resemble a Scabiosa and the guard petals are 
a broad setting of velvety maroon. It blooms early 
and late, from June to frost. Harmony makes a 
nice variety to plant in front of the taller, larger 
flowered Marigolds. (See color plate on Page 22.) 
Pkt. lOc; '/& oz. 25c. 
13 92 DWARF DOURLE HARMONY HYBRIDS. 
Very early free flowering dwarf compact Marigold, 
in the popular Harmony type and in a wide range of 
colors, including Harmony, Spotlight, golden 
orange and golden yellow self-colored, and many 
blotched and striped combinations of orange and 
yellow shades with mahogany-red. Pkt. 15c. 
Marigold, Dwarf Single Ferdinand 
Marigold, Dwarf French 
Scabiosa—Flowered Orbit 
Marigold, Glgantea Orange Sunset 
Scabiosa-Flowered Marigolds 
13 95-A DWARF FRENCH SCABIOSA-FLOWER¬ 
ED ORBIT. Orbit is one of the brightest little 
annuals we have ever seen. Its quilled centers are a 
deep golden yellow, with a perfect background of 
reddish brown guard petals. Orbit grows to a 
height of 11 inches, is free flowering and the plants 
are compact and excellent for border and bedding 
purposes. Pkt. 25c. 
13 95-B DWARF FRENCH SCABIOSA-FLOWER¬ 
ED CORONET. Coronet has a quilled center of 
deep golden yellow and the collar petals are of 
reddish brown. It has a dwarf habit, growing about 
18 inches tall and the plants make a very even 
growth, with stems 12 inches long, making it very 
useful for bedding and cutting. Pkt. 15c. 
Other Interesting Marigolds 
13 69 EXTRA EARLY DWARF HYBRIDS. Car¬ 
nation Flowered. This is the earliest of all the 
African type of Marigolds. Free flowering, blooms 
from 2 J4 to 3 inches across, of Guinea Gold type, 
but with a quilled center. Grows 18 inches tall, 
with many base branches, all blooming at the same 
time, making it a mass of color that practically 
covers the foliage. Pkt. 20c. 
1395 CHRYSANTHEMUM-FLOWERED LIME¬ 
LIGHT. All-America Bronze Medal 1940. 
Early and free flowering for 8 to 9 weeks. The 
flowers are of the incurved form, of pale primrose 
yellow. Uniform bushy plants about 3 feet tall. 
Pkt. 25c. 
1368 COLLARETTE CROWN OF GOLD. All- 
America Gold Medal Award. Flowers with outer 
row of broad petals and centers of short curled 
and twisted petals forming a delightfully crested 
bloom of rich orange color and fragrant. The 
foliage is odorless. Pkt. I Oc; oz. 25c. 
1367 TOM THUMB GOLDEN CROWN. A dwarf 
variety growing only 10 to 12 inches tall and fairly 
covered with large fully double blooms which 
except for being larger and more double are exact 
counterparts of Guinea Gold, its parent. Un¬ 
usually fine for front row of borders. Pkt. 29c. 
Glorious Morning Glories, Ipomeas 
Morning Glory, Heavenly Blue 
Vines Beautify Your Home 
Cover Fences, Trellises, Vacant Spots 
and Unsishtly Places with these Vines 
2125 NEW SCARLETT O’HARA. All-America 
Gold Medal. Distinct from all present Morning 
Glories, this grand new variety produces its flowers 
of rich dark wine red or deep rosy-crimson on fast 
growing vines with dark green foliage. The bright 
showy blooms are 3 to 4 inches in diameter and 
appear in about 2 x /i months from seed. This va¬ 
riety named for the leading character in “Gone 
With the Wind” should be in every garden. Start 
the seed early inside for planting out as soon as 
warm. See it in natural color on Page 21. Pkt. 1 5c. 
2395 HEAVENLY BLUE. A trellis, arbor or door¬ 
way covered with this vine is one of the most 
beautiful sights imaginable. Bright sky blue 
flowers, almost as big as saucers, are freely borne 
on the rapidly climbing vines. The vine is late 
flowering and the seed should be started in pots 
indoors. Pkt. lOc; (4 oz. 35c. 
See these in Color on Page 21. 
1393 DWARF DOUBLE HARMONY SPOT¬ 
LIGHT. Companion to the popular Harmony 
Marigold. Spotlight has crested centers of dainty 
tubular petals in a bright, lively yellow shade which 
contrasts strikingly with the broad, velvety dark 
maroon-red guard petals. Pkt. 20c. 
1394 TALL DOUBLE HARMONY MIXTURE. 
Similar in form and color combinations to the 
Dwarf Harmony Hybrids, except that the plants 
grow to a height of 20 to 24 inches. Fine for cut- 
flowers. Pkt. 15c. 
1382 TALL SINGLE HARMONY FERDINAND. 
Single flowered with a neat round, crested center of 
dainty tubular florets, in a very striking shade of 
golden yellow, surrounded by a single row of broad, 
mahogany-red guard petals. Ferdinand is the 
sauciest and sprightliest of the newer flowers. Pkt. 
25c. 
Marigold, Tom Thumb Golden Crown 
Morning Glory, Scarlett O’Hara 
The Templin-Bradley Co., Nationwide Seeds and Bulbs, Cleveland, Ohio. 
