VARIETY Per Half 
OENOTHERA (Evening Primrose) Doz. Doz. 
FY ASCP oy oe Ie. RG a a eee ea tgs tee a ee 65 .40 
Sturdy plant with large shiny leaves from 
which stems arise to a height of about 2 feet. 
Quantities of beautiful lemon-yellow blooms 
from June to October. Desirable for borders or 
beds. 
PENTSTEMON 
Bar batus arr ieee a rots et aendes ibn nes exceaecel 65 .40 
Stems grow four feet high and bear masses of 
bright scarlet and yellow bloom. Excellent for 
flashy color in medium tall plants. 
PLATYCODON (Chinese Bellflower or ‘Balloon 
Flower) 
Karly Giants Blue) ac) yet ee .65 .40 
Extra large flowering and of a superb shade of 
rich blue. One of the showiest and most 
unique of garden flowers due to their odd bal- 
loon like buds which open into bell shaped 
blooms. 
Crandinorome, sles. c ek eee ae eee 65  .40 
Grows to a height of 2 feet with large showy 
blue blossoms which appear throughout the 
summer. Splendid plant for perennial borders. 
FOLEMONIUM COERULEUM (Jacob’s Ladder).....65  .40 
A very showy, free flowering plant for the 
perennial border. Large deep blue flowers in 
abundance during May and June. Grows 2 
feet high. Very hardy. 

Diener’s Double Shasta Deaisy—See Page 20 
Cornland, Ill, June 20, 1941: 
Richards Gardens, Plainwell, M'ch. F 
Dear Sirs: Have been. wanting to write to you for some time. 
Those Delphiniums, the Vetterly and Reinelt strains I bought of 
you last year and two years ago bloomed so very beautifully and 
were a sight to behold. They grew 6% feet tall, and the stems where 
the flowers began to open to the top measured 82 inches long, 2.. 
inches around, and the individual flowers 2 3-4 inehes across. And 
shadings were wonderful. There were light blue with pink and 
Dlack bee, dark blue with pink, purple with a Javender tinge, and 
large black bee. Can’t tell you how beautiful they were. So many 
visitors came to see them and all thought them the finest they had 
ever seen, and that they have seen many. Also some newspapermen 
came and took pietures. Enclosed find a clipping of what they said. 
I have told everybody where they can get them, but so many people 
think all they have to do is set them in the ground and leave them. 
I work with mine and they surely repay one for the work. 
I want to thank you again for these lovely Delphiniums, and 
I want to get some more’from you.—Mrs. Henry Ford. 
18 
