
MARIGOLD 
HARMONY 
ICELAND POPPIES 
Papaver Nudicaule (a) 
Often grown as a biennial. Compact 
plants with fern-like foliage, graceful 
wiry stems, flowers often 4 inches across. 
Blooms freely in early summer and more 
or less all year. Better where it gets frozen 
in all winter. Disappointing in rock gar- 
dens. Sow the seed where it is to bloom. 
August to November; January to March. 
If started in flats, transplant when very 
small. 15 to 36 inches. 
Apricot. The most beautiful individual of 
all the Icelands............ Pkt. 25¢; Ye oz. 60c 
- Gartford Giants, Mixed. A new strain. The 
flowers are the largest and the stems the 
TORU ES (peers et ae. coe Pkt. 25c; Ys oz. 60c 
LARKSPUR, Annual Delphinium (a) 
Giant Imperial Strain. This strain is tall, 
basal branching and upright, needing 
only half the space of the older types. 
Long spikes of double flowers. The seed 
should be chilled before sowing in either 
fall or spring as it is slow to germinate. 
4 to 5 feet. Plants should be dusted with 
sulphur when 10 inches high and again 
when 3 feet high. 
Blue Spire. Dark blue........-..0.... Pkt. 15¢ 
SOrmine KiNG) Sect eyec es stoi Pkt. 15¢ 
ia as see ane ae Re ee ee KEL Oe 
Pink Perfection. 1939-1940. Lively luscious 
light pink, long spikes of closely placed 
2-inch florets. Early blooming......Pkt. 25¢ 
Rosalind. 1939-1940. A new color, rose suf- 
fused salmon. Center spike 4 to 5 feet 
long, six to eight side branches 3 to 4 
PCCE NON Oat cd ht Ostet eon ee Pkt. 25¢ 
White King. Pure white. S. M., A. A. S., 
OS eay Un Catia it serene soe: Pkt. 15¢ 
Exquisite Mixed. Blush pink, blue, car- 
mine, light rose pink, lilac, salmon, white 
and other colors.......... Pkt. 15¢; 4 oz. 35¢ 
Group Collection. One packet each, all six 
varieties listed above (omitting the mix- 
ture and Rose Pink below).................. 85¢ 
Super-Majestic Rose Pink. 1940. A planting 
of this new larkspur at the seed farm was 
simply stunning, a solid mass of plants 
6 feet high, covered with large clear rose- 
pink blooms. The plants are compact 
Bnd base branching: 2.2 .-.00.2-..2.- Pkt. 25c 
Lilac Queen 
MARIGOLD 
PETUNIA 
Flaming Velvet Type 
Gigantea 
LINARIA, Wild Snapdragon, 
Toad Flax (a) 
Fairy Bouquet—Tiny snapdragons in bright 
pastel colors. Planted close and _ half 
starved they make a solid mass of color. 
An excellent filler-in for new iris plant- 
ings. Sow in the open ground in the fall 
and again in the spring. 8 inches to 10 
ht tol sts pate eres 3 Pkt. 10c; 3 for 20c 
LOBELIA (a) 
One of the most satisfactory of all annual 
border and window-box plants. Start in 
flats fall or early spring, transplant out- 
doors 6 inches apart. 4 to 6 inches. 
Cambridge Blue. New light blue, large flow- 
ered. , 
Crystal Palace. True dark blue, dark foli- 
age. 
Emperor William. Gentian blue, green foli- 
age. 
Pkts. 15¢ each; 3 for 35c 
MORNING GLORY, Ipomea (a) 
Soak the seeds over night and plant in 
open ground after the weather is warm. 
Keep the plants rather dry to induce 
early and abundant flowering. 
Heavenly Blue. Clarke’s Strain. One of the 
finest blue: flowers. 24242 Pkt. 15¢ 
Pearly Gates. New. 1941. Great pearly 
white flowers, 25 per cent larger than 
Heavenly: Bluel2. 25 Sais aera Pkt. 25¢ 
.) 

POT O' GOLD 


SALPIGLOSSIS 
Base Branchina 
MARIGOLDS (a) 
Sow in early spring, either in flats or out- 
doors. Will thrive even in the driest and 
sunniést locations and the long lasting 
blooms continue to appear for months. 
Don’t overfeed or overwater them. 
GIGANTEA. 31/, to 6 feet. The largest mari- 
golds yet developed, 5 inches in diame- 
ter. Have a definite sweet scent. Full 
centered flowers of fairly loose formation, 
with broad heavy petals gracefully over- 
lapping. A small per cent come single. 
Orange Sunset. Rich orange. 
Pkt. 20c; 4 oz. 70 
Sunset Giants. Deep orange to primrose. 
Pkt. 15¢; 4 oz. 50 
Pot o’ Gold. 1940. Dwarf gigantea, bright 
deep golden orange in color 12 to 15 
inches. Very early flowering, from 7 to 8 
weeks. Come 100 per cent double. Flow- 
ers 4 to 414 inches across with 10 to 12- 
inch stems. Besides being a fine cut flower 
it is an excellent bedding plant....Pkt. 25¢ 
CARNATION FLOWERED. ‘The well-known 
extremely popular loosely ruffled broad- 
petaled flower form, on 2 to 214-foot 
branching plants nearly 100 per cent 
double. 
Improved Guinea Gold. Reselected strain. 
Orange, loosely ruffled. 
Pkt. 15¢; 4 oz. 40¢ 
Yellow Supreme. Creamy lemon yellow. 
Fine cut flower. G. M.; A. A. S. 735. 
Pkt. 15¢; 4 oz. 40¢ 
DWARF FRENCH DOUBLE. 12 inches. Small 
ball-shaped double blooms, 114 inches 
across, freely borne on dwarf compact 
plants. For edging, bedding and pot 
culture, they are unequalled. Early and 
free-blooming. 
BUTTERBALL. 1941 introduction. Real little 
butterballs cover the whole plant. 6 to 8 
TN CHES ek sy eee ta a ee Sk eae Pkt. 25c 
Harmony Hybrid Mixture. Dwarf and dou- 
ble. Flowering two and a half months 
after seed sowing. No strong marigold 
odor. Color range, orange, golden yellow 
and maroon, solid colors, and blotched 
and striped combinations. All the crested 
centers with broad guard petals. 
Pkt. 25¢; 3 for 60¢ 

28 
CARL SALBACH 
