
Dahlia Unwin’s Dwarf Hybrids 
COREOPSIS. Daisy-like flowers with 
broad fluted petals. Rich, glossy 
chrome yellow. 
CUPHEA, Firefly. A new ever-bloom- 
ing dwarf, compact border or rockery 
plant filled with small cerise red 
showy flowers. 
CYPRESS VINE. A popular climber 
with delicate fern-like foliage and 
masses of small star-shaped white and 
red flowers. About 15 ft. 
CYNOGLOSSUM. 
(@@Firmament, Amabile Dwarf Com- 
pactum (Annual). Similar in color 
and type of bloom to the taller and 
long popular Amabile Deep Ultra- 
marine Blue but only about half 
as tall and very compact. 
DAHLIA. 
Unwin’s Dwarf Hybrids. Flowering 
in sixty days from seed. This re- 
markable strain produces branching 
plants 2 ft. tall, bearing double and 
semi-double flowers 3 in. in diam- 
eter, of lovely soft pink, lavender, 
red, orange, yellow and maroon. 
They flower until frost kills the 
plants, and produce tubers which 
can be saved. Pinched back, they 
make fine pot plants. 
Advance Special Strain. Large flow- 
ered decorative varieties. Pkt. 15c. 
DIMORPHOTHECA. African Daisies. 
Cape Marigold. Showy annuals from 
South Africa, about 1 ft. tall, with 
fine, Daisy-like blooms during summer 
Pi 
and fall. Good for rock gardens, 
edgings and cutting. 
Glistening White. Orange Improved. 
Golden West. Hybrida Mixed. 
DAISY. 
English Daisy (Bellis Perennis) 
Double Monstrosa. <A favorite for 
edgings, low beds, and rock gar- 
dens. The leaves form a low rosette. 
The button-like flowers are com- 
posed of tightly packed petals. 
Vigorous plants bear extra large 
flowers. 
Pink. Red. 
White. Mixed. 
Shasta Daisy (Alaska). Large white. 
DELPHINIUM. Wrexham Hybrids. 
DIGITALIS (Foxglove). 
Stately, 
picturesque beauty. White, yellow, 
rose and purple flowers gloriously 
spotted. A popular favorite in all 
old-fashioned gardens. 

Double Dianthus 
DIANTHUS (Pinks). Garden Pinks 
with their single or double Carna- 
tion-like flowers make _ excellent 
border plants for modern gardens. 
Gay blossoms on strong stems come 
in a variety of rich colors, and their 
stripes and markings make them 
especially attractive. 
Heddewigii (Japanese Pinks). 1 ft. 
Annual. 
Double Choice Mixed. 
Single Choice Mixed. 
Plumarius (Grass or Clove Pinks). 
1% ft. Perennial. 
Scoticus Double, Scotch Mixed, Spe- 
cial Strain. 

California Poppies, (Eschscholtzia) 
ECHINOPS RITRO (Globe Thistle). 3 
ft. tall with huge round thistle-like, 
bright blue balls. 
ESCHSCHOLTZIA (California Poppy). 
Dainty free-flowering plants of 
easiest culture, with gaily colored, 
Poppy-like flowers with a _ satiny 
finish; do well in any well-drained 
loose soil and sunny position. For 
vases, cut when buds show color. 
Aurantiaca. The original California 
Poppy with deep golden orange 
flowers. Showy and _ Desirable. 
Brilliant Mixed. 
BUPHORBIA (Snow on the Mountain). 
Foliage Plant. 
FORGET-ME-NOT (Myosotis). 
Alpestris, blue. Rich indigo blue flow- 
ers. 
FOUR O’CLOCK, Marvel 
Finest Mixed. 
GAILLARDIA (The Blanket Flower). 
Large, brightly colored, daisy-like 
flowers. Blooms summer and fall. 
Fine for beds and cutting. 
Dazzler. Large golden yellow flow- 
ers with rich maroon center. 
GERANIUM, Zonale. Well known, old 
fashioned favorite. Excellent for 
window boxes, pots or for massed 
beds. Fine mixed. 
GLOBE AMARANTH. Popularly known 
as Bachelor’s Button, a first rate 
bedding plant; the flowers resemble 
clover heads and ean be dried and 
used in winter bouquets. 
Red Mixed. 
GODETIA. Attractive bushy plants, 
fine for beds, borders and cutting. 
Single Mixed. Tall upright. 
GOURDS. Easily grown. The ripened 
fruit is used for ornaments. Orna- 
mental and Dipper Gourds. 
GYPSOPHILA (Baby’s Breath). Well 
known mistly blooms used for mix- 
ing with other flowers. 
Carminea. Pink. 
Paris Market. White. 
GILIA. Graceful for garden and cut- 
flowers. Dainty blue flower. 
of Peru. 
/mprove Your Flower 
Garden with Peat Moss 
for Humus. 

Gaillardia the Dazzler 

LANE-WILSON SEED COMPANY, SHREVEPORT, LOUISIANA 
