Annual Flower Seeds 
23 
Templin-Bradley’s 
Lovely Sweet Peas 
Most Desirable Varieties of Finest Quality 
For distinctive beauty and extra fragrance, the Sweet Pea has no rival. You can have 
Sweet Peas in your own garden just as fine as those of the Florist. Pick the flowers fre- 
quently for abundant bloom. One ounce of seed will plant a single row 20 feet long. 
Sweet Pea Culture. Prepare a deep trench, removing top soil and loosen subsoil, working into it 
some well rotted manure, replace top soil, leaving it 4 to 5 inches deep. Sow Sweet Pea seed in 
bottom of trench, 12 to 15 seeds to the foot for each row, then cover seed with 2 or 3 inches of soil 
pad ea mee pete erally te up to the level. Sweet Peas must be sown early in the spring to 
ge € best results, Just as early as you can possibly work il. This i 
Sweet Peas on St. Patrick’s Day. 4 agen Se ey any geey: Plant 
Plant Sweet Peas twice, both Classes each time, 
M 
Samince hoiwers in March and May for early and late 

Inoculate Your Sweet Peas 

The Original Legume Inoculator 


NOBBE-HILTNER (a 
N IT RA ¢ is I \ 
Restores and Maintains Soil Fertility 
for 25c. 
Inoculating your Sweet Pea seed when planting insures more 
vigorous growth, stronger stems, larger blooms and an earlier 
and longer blooming season. The Garden Size Nitragin will 
inoculate a pound of Sweet Pea Seed. 
4340 NITRAGIN, 
Garden Size Pkt. 10c; 3 Pkts. 

Summer Flowering 
Giant Spencers 
Same thrifty, vigorous large waved and frilled 
flowers as the Early Flowering Giant Spencer 
Sweet Peas, except that they bloom 3 to 4 weeks 
later. Plant both Early and Summer Flowering 
varieties and have a double blooming period 
with a wealth of Sweet Peas for dainty bouquets. 
1829 ANGLO. Yellow, edged pink. 
1824 BEGONIA ROSE. Begonia-rose. 
1848 BLACK DIAMOND. Deep maroon-black. 
1843 CAPRI. Best light blue. 
1842 CHINESE BLUE. Rich deep blue. 
1838 ENSIGN. Cornflower-blue. 
1826 ETHERIAL. Peach and rose. 
1830 EXQUISITE. Coral-salmon. 
1839 FLORA. Clear lilac-lavender. 
1812 GIGANTIC. Large flowered, white. 
1832 GOLD CREST. Orange and salmon. 
1834 GOLDEN WINGS. Salmon-orange. 
1813 GRAND NATIONAL. Frilled cream. 
1819 GRAND SLAM. Cerise, shaded orange. 
1815 HEADLIGHT. Scarlet, shaded orange. 
1831 LADY MACBETH. Dazzling ruby-red. 
1833 LA FRANCE. Salmon-pink on cream. 
1827 LULLABY. Rose-pink on white. 
1825 MARY PICKFORD. Pink and salmon. 
1844 MYSTIC. Soft lavender. 
1854 PACIFIC. Luminous pink. 
1828 PINKIE. Deep rose-pink. 
1840 REFLECTION. Cornflower-blue. 
1821 ROBUSTUM. Rich apricot-pink. 
1814 ROMANCE. Rose-pink, white ground. 
1817 RUDDIGORE. Glowing scarlet. 
1823 STYLIST. Pink flushed salmon. 
1846 SYBIL HENSHAW. Blood-red. 
1852 TRANQUILITY. Rose-lilac on cream. 
1855 VANITY. Deep geranium-pink. 
1811 WHAT JOY. Primrose, shaded cream. 
Price on Any of Above Varieties 
Any 1 Pkt. 10¢c; 3 Pkts. 25c; '7 Pkts. 55c. 

Annual Sweet Williams 
Sweet Peas in 
Special Mixtures 
1809 NEW VARIETY MIXTURE. For the Con- 
noisseur. As the name of the collection states, it is 
made entirely from New Varieties of Sweet Peas, 
of both the Early and Summer Flowering classes 
listed on this page. If you wish to have an ‘‘Up to 
the Minute”’ Garden, this is the mixture you should 
plant. These wonderful varieties, glorious colors, 
beautifully waved and frilled flowers, make this 
the grandest Sweet Pea Mixture possible. Pkt. 
25c; Oz. GOc; 4 Ib. $1.75; Lb. $35.00. 
1808 DE LUXE GARDEN MIXTURE. Here is a 
mixture that will give you many thrills and a 
wealth of lovely flowers. We have combined both 
Early and Summer Flowering Classes, old and new 
varieties, every color and shade found in Sweet 
Peas and are giving you a truly De Luxe Garden. 
Pkt. 20c; Oz. 45c; 14 lb. $1.25; Lb. $3.50. 

1807 TEMPLIN-BRADLEY’S MEDAL MIX- 
TURE. If you have a limited amount of space for 
your Sweet Peas and yet wish to have the best 
named varieties in the most colorful and gorgeous 
display of Sweet Pea beauty and daintiness, plant 
this Templin-Bradley Medal Mixture. We have 
combined thirty or more choice named varieties 
of the Butterfly or Orchid Flowering Spencer 
Summer-Flowering Sweet Peas into this fine mix- 
ture. It will give you an unlimited supply of 
beautiful flowers for dainty bouquets. Pkt. 1Se; 
Oz. 35c; 14 lb. 85c; Lb. $2.25. 
1806 SUMMER FLOWERING MIXED. Our 
mixture contains many choice varieties, the best 
in their respective colors. They are all large and 
wonderfully frilled and waved and will give you a 
splendid assortment of shades and colors in this 
delightful class of Sweet Peas. Summer Flowering. 
Pkt. 10c; Oz. 25c; 14 lb. 60c; Lb. $1.75. 

1861 EARLY FLOWERING MIXED. A splendid 
mixture of the above named varieties and many 
colors and tones. If you wish a fine lot of Sweet 
Peas with little space and a limited expenditure, 
plant these with our summer flowering mixed. 
Pkt. 10c; % oz. 30c; Oz. 50c. 

Grow Your Own Beautiful Bouquets 
Early Flowering 
Giant Spencers 
Our Early Flowering Giant Spencer Sweet Peas 
have been bred to bloom 3 to 4 weeks earlier than 
the Summer Flowering Spencers, and they con- 
tinue to bloom over a much longer period, too. 
Sweet Peas thrive best in the Spring and early 
Summer while the days are moderately cool. If 
your Sweet Pea vines have suffered in the past 
from extremely hot weather, try some of these 
Early Flowering Spencers and enjoy an abundance 
of bloom before the hot days come. This type is 
excellent for Winter and early Spring bloom in 
the greenhouse, too. 
1863 SNOW QUEEN. New large pure white. 
1872 IRIS BLUE. Glowing deep rich blue. 
1925 VALENCIA. Long stemmed bright orange. 
1949 TITANIA. Richest brightest deep rose. 
1905 ROSE PICOTEE. Salmon rose edged white. 
1889 TRIUMPH. Beautiful lilac mauve. 
1879 TOP HAT. Deep velvety violet blue. 
1894 EVENING STAR. Bright orange scarlet. 
1918 BOON. A very fine deep salmon pink. 
1940 VIRGINIA. Rose pink on white ground. 
1913 SPRING SONG. New shade of salmon pink. 
1937 CATTLEYA. Long stemmed rosy lilac. 
1950 VIVIAN. Very fine clear deep rose. 
1886 FRAGRANCE. A clear lavender shelf. 
1897 INSPIRATION. Large rich salmon cerise. 
1917 ATTRACTION. Bright lively salmon pink. 
1948 DELICIOUS. The shade of crushed straw- 
berries. 
1878S PRINCESS BLUE. Rich light blue color. 
1901 AVIATOR. Glowing crimson scarlet. 
1916 MONTEREY. Beautiful geranium-pink. 
1944 EILEEN. Rich Begonia rose shade. 
1890 HEATHER BELL. Delicate mauve lavender. 
1926 TREASURE ISLAND. New rich golden orange. 
1943 SHIRLEY TEMPLE. New, sweet and lovely 
as its namesake. Bright rose-pink. Large flower 
daintily frilled and fluted. 
Price on Any of the Above Varieties 
Any 1 Pkt. 10c; 3 Pkts. 25c; '7 Pkts. 55c. 

Sweet Williams, Annual 
698 ANNUAL SWEET WILLIAMS MIXED. A 
very fine and desirable annual variety not quite 
as tall as the perennial but in just as fine an array 
of colors. A valuable sort for bedding and for 
cut flowers. Culture D or E. Pkt. 8c; 18 Oz. 
25c. 

Sweet Wivelsfield 
Sweet Wivelsfield is a new hardy Annual, the 
results of a cross between Dianthus Allwoodii 
and Dianthus Barbatus. Free flowering from 
June to frost. Color includes rich reds and purple, 
through shades of pinks to white, solid colors 
and with markings. 
700 SINGLE SWEET WIVELSFIELD. Pkt. 10c. 
701 DOUBLE SWEET WIVELSFIELD. Pkt. 15c. 

Torenia 
1995 FOURNERI. Bushy plants about 12 inches 
high, bearing curious b-ue flowers with bright 
yellow throat during late Summer and Fall. Fine 
for beds or for potting and porch boxes. Pkt. 1 0c. 
Tithonias 
1984 SPECIOSA, GOLDEN FLOWER OF THE 
INCAS, or Mexican Sunflower. Tall, shrubby, 
border plant; bears large dazzling orange-scarlet 
flowers, partially hidden by foliage. Long bloom- 
ing. Culture D or E. Pkt. 10c. 
1983 EARLY FLOWERING MIXED. Improved 
ree ene dwarfer, blooms two weeks earlier. 
. Lde. 
1985 SPECIOSA FIREBALL. Its blaze of fiery 
color, surmounting the attractive foliage of the 
tall plants, often 8 to 9 feet tall. Pkt. 25c. 

a i 
Ursinias 
2036 ANETHOIDES. Native of Africa; novelty 
here. Daisy-like flowers 1}4 inches across, of rich 
yellow, with purple center, above tufts of leaves 
on long, wiry stems. Remain open all day. Plants 
1 foot high. Culture D or E. Pkt. 10c. 
2037 PULCHRA. This charming new Ursinia is of 
semi-dwarf habit producing an abundance of rich 
orange daisy-like blooms. It is especially fine for 
dwarf borders or carpeting where much color is 
desired. The beautiful and very refined flowers are 
very fine for cut-flower use and combine well in 
bouquet or bowl arrangement. Pulchra prefers a 
sunny location. Pkt. 15c. 
The Templin-Bradley Co., Nationwide Seedsmen and Nurserymen, Cleveland, Ohio 
