LINA R/ A (Miniature Snapdragon). (A). Flower 
resembles miniature Snapdragon and in 
addition has a long Columbine-like spur. Blooms in 
about eight weeks after sowing. Height 12 to 18 
inches. Flowers come in a wide variety of pastel 
shades. Well adapted for borders and rockeries, 
showy effect when grouped in masses. Blooms pro- 
fusely and continuously until frost. Mixed. 
Packet, 10c. 
iL [NOM (Flowering Flax). (hA&P). Growth 1 to 2 
feet. Sun and slight shade. Erect, 
branching freely, with slender branches and flower 
stems; numerous broadly lanceolate to oblong, sessile, 
smooth and shining leaves; terminal, salver-shaped 
flowers blooming in summer until frost. Easy to grow 
from seeds sown in early spring. For the mixed 
border combining with Larkspur, Verbena, Heuchera 
and Ageratum. Varieties: Annual Scarlet; Per- 
ennial Blue. Packet, 10c. 
LOBE. llA (hA). Grows 6 to 12 inches in sun or 
light shade. Trailing, or compact, 
bushy plants; variable, dark-green, bronzed, or light- 
green leaves. Irregular, small tubular flowers, borne 
on slender pedicels, varying from light to dark blue. 
Excellent for borders, rock work and _ hanging 
baskets. For best results sow thinly in flats, covering 

with glass until seedlings are through soil. 
Trans- 
plant into a moist, well fertilized bed. Grouping— 
Gold Tuft, Iceland Poppy, Coreopsis, Siberian 
_ Wallflower and Pot Marigold. Varieties: Crystal 
Palace, compact form with deep blue flowers. 
Gracilis, creeping, with light-green foliage and 
light blue flowers. Sapphire, dark blue, white 
eye, trailing. Packet, 10c. 
LUPIN (Russell Lupin). (P). Distinguished 
by their deeply cut foliage, which has 
many lance-like rays radiating from the end of 
the leaf stalk. The flowers, shaped like those of 
peas, are borne in great profusion on long- 
stemmed spikes. The flowers, predominantly 
blue, yellow, white or rose, are usually borne in 
May and June. After the first bloom is over, if 
the plants are cut back, they will often produce 
a second showing of flowers. Grows about 3 feet 
tall, thriving in either sun or partial shade. 
Mixed. Packet, 15c. 
M. A RIGOL D IS’ are truly the amateur garden- 
er’s best friend. They are 
both hardy and colorful, which makes them 
ideal for all types of garden work. Blooms start 
early in July and continue until late fall. They 
are free from or withstand disease better than 
most other annuals. These showy annuals may 
be raised by sowing seed in the open garden as 
soon as the soil is warm, but a more certain 
method of procuring fine plants is to sow the 
seed in flats or hot beds about the first of March. 
Crown of Gold. Individual plants deviate very 
little from the average height of 24 inches. The 
lower branches are clustered near the ground 
level, while the higher branches are sub- 
opposite or alternate on the main stem. The 
plants are extremely floriferous, which gives to 
a plant in full bloom the appearance of a large 
orange top with a green base. Packet, 10c. 
[17 ] 
ORIENTAL POPPY 
Sunset Giant. The very largest Marigold yet 
developed, blooms reach a size of 5 inches in 
diameter. The definite sweet scent of the flowers 
adds to its value as a cut flower, as well as being 
a good garden plant. The plants are extremely 
robust, producing a heavy growth of foliage, 
with 6 to 8 heavy branches each bearing 3 to 6 
flowers. The plant grows from 31% to 4 feet tall. 
Packet, 10c. 
Harmony French Dwarf Double. The neat, 
dwart, compact habit, combined with the ex- 
tremely early, free flowering character of the 
plants makes this new dwarf Harmony Hybrid 
one of the outstanding introductions of the 
season. Flowers are medium size, rather large 
for the French type, averaging 134 inches in 
diameter and do not have the strong Marigold 
odor. The color range includes the popular 
yellow and innumerable blotches and striped 
combinations of golden orange and maroon, and 
various shades of golden and lemon yellow with 
the contrasting dark maroon. Plants reach a 
height of 12 to 14 inches. Packet, 10c. 
Signata Pumila Little Giant is the smallest 
Marigold yet developed, grows but 9 inches tall. 
These dainty plants make an excellent border as 
their brilliant golden yellow flowers bloom pro- 
fusely throughout the entire summer up until 
late fall. Packet, 10c. 
Dwarf French Double. 
Mixed. Packet, 10c. 
Tall African Double. An especially fine tall 
(3 feet) branching, bearing enormous flowers of 
the quilled type. Orange, Lemon and Mixed. 
Packet, 10c. 
Grow 1 foot tall. 
