AGERATUM, MIDGET BLUE 
Silver Medal, All-America Selection, 1940 
A very dwarf (2 to 3 inches high). Ageratum with delicate foliage, 
which is practically smothered with small true Ageratum Blue flowers. 
This is really the first dwarf Ageratum that we have found that will come 
uniformly dwarf and true to color from seed. Pkt. 25c. 
PETUNIA, GIANTS OF CALIFORNIA 
A new strain of rose and pink shades. Light, richly-veined throats sur¬ 
rounded by satiny petals which are heavily ruffled. Large blooms, 5 to 
7 inches in diameter, produced on strong, richly-foliaged plants. Excel¬ 
lent bedding variety; fine window box type. Pkt. 25c. 
MARIGOLD, FERDINAND 
Saucy, sprightly, and colorful. Single flowered with a neat, crested 
center of dainty tubular florets in an arresting shade of golden 
yellow surrounded by a single row of broad, mahogany-red guard 
petals. Although the flowers are of medium size, they are ex¬ 
tremely showy, and make a fine cut flower subject. Early bloom¬ 
ing. Pkt. 25c. 
SNAPDRAGON, 
ROSALIE 
Bronze Medal, 
All-America Selections, 
1940. 
This exciting color is en¬ 
tirely new in Antirrhinum. 
It is a rich deep rose with 
an underlying tone of topaz 
or amber, giving a richness 
which makes it stand out 
among all other colors. 
The plants are base branch¬ 
ing and produce from six 
to eight huge long flower¬ 
ing spikes on which the 
florets are decidedly well 
arranged. This is an all¬ 
purpose Snapdragon. 
Pkt. 25c. 
NIEREMBERGIA HIPPOMANICA 
The flowers of Nierembergia Hippomanica are a lovely 
lavender blue shade, heightened by a touch of yellow in 
the center. The plants are dwarf and compact, about 5 or 
6 inches tall. Foliage is light gray green, very inconspicu¬ 
ous, and there are literally hundreds of flowers in bloom 
at a time throughout the summer. Excellent for edgings, 
rockeries, or window boxes. Pkt. 25c. 
