LUPINUS ANNUAL 
Sow Lupinus seed fairly early while soil is still cool. 
Lupinus can be a very showy annual. NANUS—10 inches. 
Blue, marked white, but varies. Extra good. Easy. Pkt. 
Be; 4 oz. 20c. SUBCARNOSUS—Silky leaves, big blue 
blossoms. Texas Bluebonnet. Pkt. 5c. HARTWEGII 
MIXED—24 inches. Long, graceful spikes of showy flowers, 
rose, white and blue in blend. Pkt. 5c; % oz. 20c. TRUN- 
CATUS—16 inches. Blood-red blossoms that age to purple. 
Plants like miniature trees. Pkt. 10c. OFFER 27A12—One 
pkt. of each for 20c. See page 51 for hardy perennial 
Lupines. 
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LYCHNIS ANNUAL MIXED—ex(3)18. Bright rose, white, 
or blue of Delphinium are the pretty flowers. Easy and 
desirable. Botanical position uncertain, but likely simply 
color selections of Lychnis Coeli-rosa. Pkt. 10c. 
MALOPE TRIFIDA—bx(2-3)38. Branching plants carry 
large salver flowers of crimson. Pkt. 10c. 
MALVA MAURITIANA—eck (3-5)60. Excellent tall and 
showy annual. Large and attractive flowers of rich rose, 
striped crimson, great pyramids of them. Now classed as 
a Malva sylvestris variety. Pkt. 10c; 44 oz. 20c. 
MALVA MOSCHATA PINK—econbx(3)30. Big blossoms of 
satiny pink in utmost profusion, great sheafs of beauty. 
Splendid cut flower. Though actually only a Courtesy An- 
nual, being a true hardy perennial, it will blossom with 
full freedom first year if sowing is made early. Pkt. 10c; 
8 pkts. for 25c. 
MALVA MOSCHATA WHITE—Here the blossoms are of a 
lively sparkling whiteness. Pkt. 10c; 4% oz. 20c. 
MAURANDIA BLEND—eurk(w). Airy trailers, delightful 
in foliage and flower. ‘“‘Snapdragon” blossoms that may be 
white, rose, lavender or violet. Rock garden, porch box 
or as pot plant. Pkt. 15c. 
MARIGOLD DIVERSITIES 
—and they might with equal truth have been termed 
Marigold excellencies. Easy they are to grow, and to enjoy, 
these opulent beauties of late summer and autumn. 
MARIGOLD LIMELIGHT—ecbx(3-4)22. Intensely double, 
petals tight incurved; curled and interlaced like those of 
certain Florist Chrysanthemums. The blossoms are soft 
creamy primrose, the lightest color-tone found anywhere in 
Marigolds. Blooms early and keeps flowering until freezes 
come. Limelight is a really valuable and distinct break in 
Marigolds, one of the few real advances inthis flower despite 
the large number of new varieties introduced of late. We 
recommend it fully. Pkt. 15¢c; \%& oz. 25c; 4% oz. 40c. 
MARIGOLD FLAMING FIRE—ecbx(2-4)25. Big flowers on 
long stems, single, and perhaps most often all of a flaming 
red, but varied patterns there will be at times, even on one 
plant, in red, maroon, lemon and gold. A bold and gor- 
geous beauty. Pkt. 10c; %4 oz. 30c. 
MARIGOLD POT O’ GOLD—ecx(2-4)14. Immense flowers, 
up to 41% inches diameter, in brightest golden orange, al- 
together double always, full-centered, with broad petals 
gracefully overlapping throughout. The plants are low, but 
sturdily built, and each may carry a dozen of the massive 
blooms. Early flowering. Pkt. 15c; % oz. 25c. 
OTHER GOOD MARIGOLDS—King’s Ransom, pkt. 10c; 
Lucida, pkt. 15¢c; Guinea Gold, pkt. 10¢; Swiss Beauty, pkt. 
10c; Orange Alldouble (Giant. African), pkt. 10c, % oz. 
25c; Lemon All double (Giant African), pkt. 10c, 4 oz. 
25c; Royal Scot All Double French, pkt. 10c, 4% oz. 20c; 
Legion of Honor, pkt. 5c, %4 oz. 20c; Crown of Gold, pkt. 
10c; Idabelle Firestone, pkt. 25c; Sunset Giants, pkt. 10c; 
1% oz. 25c; Signata pumila, pkt. 10c, % oz. 20c, % oz. 35c; 
Dwarf Double French Mixed, pkt. 10c, 44 oz. 25c; African 
Giants Mixed, pkt. 10c, %4 oz. 25c. 
MARIGOLD DISPLAY BLEND—All of the above, with 
many others in one great mixing. Here’s for gay surprise. 
Pkt. 10c; % oz. 25c; 1 oz. 75e. 
OFFER 28A12—One pkt. each of above 17 for $1.50. 
No short cuts to taking care. 

MIGNONETTE GOLIATH—ecobx(2-3)12. Spikes of pleas- 
ing coppery red, sweetly, intensely, fragrant. Pkt. 10c; 
¥% oz. 20. 
MIGNONETTE GOLDEN, GOLIATH—Bright golden yellow; 
otherwise like last. Pkt. 15c; 1/16 oz. 25¢. 
[ 31 ] 

5 ae 
MADIA ELEGANS—estk(3-4)36. A very lovely flower. Long — 
three-lobed petals of soft yellow, each with rich brown — 
spot at base. Pkt. 15c. 
MOLUCELLA LAEVIS — ebx(8)30. 
verticillate whorls, piled high to form long ‘“‘hyacinth” 
spikes of delicate pearly greenness, sun through sea-water. 
A. conchological-floral oddity, sometimes called Irish Bells 
from the effect of the green campanulate ealyces. It comes 
actually from Molucca, Land of Spice, right on the other side 
of the earth from Ireland. It cuts. Pkt. 15c; 3 for 40c. 
MORICANDIA ARVENSIS—ebk (8) 25. Excellent blue-glau- 
cous foliage; crucifer flowers that are lavender-violet in 

The blossom-calyces, 
shell-formed, translucent and reticulate, are carried in close — 
spring and fall, but light lavender during summer’s heat. 
In continual bloom from early June to late November. Good 
when massed. Pkt. 15c. ; 
MIMULUS RICHLY-TINTED 
There is an odd suggestion of Orchid about the blossoms, 
and very much of the Orchid allurement. The _ colorings 
are exotic, exciting, ranging through cardinal red, coppery 
crimson, blue-lavender with yellow lip, soft pink, pure yellow, 
and yellow all splashed with red vividness. Sow Mimulus 
early, and with care, for the seed is fine. Give ita bit of 
shade at the beginning, see that the soil is rich, not too 
light, and that the plants are watered when drought de- 
scends; thus you may pleasure yourself amazingly, for 
Mimulus will be most delightfully different from anything 
you have grown before, unless, of course, you have grown 
Mimulus. Here we offer a mixture of strains. For separate 
kinds, see Treasure Chest. Pkt. 15c; 3 pkts. for 40c. 
THE WONDER-FLOWERS 
Mirabilis, of course, here in three annuals of easiest pos- 
sible culture, all of a high desirability. 
MIRABILIS UNIFLORA—ebx(2-4)30. Bright rose flowers 
of most unusual trumpet-in-trumpet form, the delicately 
tinted long-tubed flaring blossoms rising from a much-ruffled 
companulate involucre or “second flower”? of the same deeply 
dyed rose. The vivid involucres are persistent, displaying 
their hues al! day, day after day. Effect is very like that 
of slender Nicotiana trumpets rising from the centers of 
Petunia blooms. Pkt. 15c; 3 for 40c. 
MIRABILIS VISCOSA—ebx(8)386. Ten-o’clock Flower. Day- 
break finds the plants filled with blossoms of intensely bril- 
. liant rose purple, these carried in high graceful sprays over 
the attractive, somewhat succulent foliage. Along with the 
- true flowers are innumerable open involucres of like size and © 
form, crinkly and silken buff-tan, bloom-simulates so close 
that the effect is of a plant carrying two kinds of flowers. 
Really very good. Pkt. 15c; 3 for 40c; 8 for 90c. 
MIRABILIS JALAPA—ebx(8)20. These are the Four- 

o’clocks (but not on daylight-saving time), or again they — 
may be called Marvel of Peru. White, yellow, rose, red, pink, 
lilac, sometimes even three colors in one flower. Makes a — 
quick, low hedge. Pkt. 10c; 4% oz. 20c. 
OFFER 29A12—One pkt. each of above for 35c. 

Few think but all feel. 
The successful politician 
knows this full well. 

NASTURTIUM 
From cream, through lemon, rose, salmon, chamois, 
orange, cerise, scarlet, blood-red, maroon and mahogany, 
with shades and tones between, with bizarre variegations, 
all these are the rich Nasturtium colorings, found through- 
out the varied classes of them. Botanically Tropaeolum. 
NASTURTIUM DWARF DOUBLE GIANTS — Compact 
globes of plants massed with varied beauty, big blossoms 
semi-double to double, fragrant. Pkt. 10c; % oz. 20c. 
NASTURTIUM DOUBLE TIGERED—Flowers in oddest col- 
orings, parti-hued, marbled, blotched or striped contrasting- 
ly. Fragrant, semi-double. A half-dwarf matformer. Pkt. 
10c; 4 oz. 20c. 
NASTURTIUM DWARF SINGLE MIXED — About the 
finest of blended old-time single-flowered bush Nasturtiums. 
Superb color range; odd foliage types. Pkt. 5c; 1 oz. 20c; 
Y% Ib. 50c. 
NASTURTIUM TALL MIXED — Single-flowered climbing 
Nasturtium in fine mixture. Pkt. 5c; 1 oz. 15c; % Ib. 40c. 
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