T. W. Wood & Sons Sens 
Kochia or Burning 
No. 929. 
Bush (MEXICAN FIRE PLANT.) A 
rapid growing, highly ornament- 
al annual forming perfect pyramids 2 to 
24 feet high, covered with feathery green 
branches, which in the fall turn to a deep 
red. Makes a fine summer hedge. Thin 
out to 18 inches apart. Pkt. 5c.; 4 oz. 
20c.; oz. 30c. 
7 Nothing better 
No. 948, Lobelia for bedding edg- 
ings, pots and rockeries; effective in 
masses, covered with lovely blue blooms 
for a long season. Start in boxes and 
transplant. Easy to grow; 6 inches high. 
Half hardy annual. Pkt. 10c.; 4 oz. 25c. 
No. 973. Marvel of Peru 
(FOUR O’CLOCK). Opens in the after- 
noon and on cloudy days. Flowers sho 
and in great profusion. Hardy annual. 
pleight 2 feet. Mixed colors. Pkt. 10c.; 
Oz. co 
MARIGOLD 
Easily grown, free-flowering annuals, 
bearing brilliant flowers till frost. For 
the earliest blooms, plant in boxes and 
transplant after frost. 
No. 959. Sunset Giants—Immense blooms, 
sometimes 7 inches across, averaging 5 
inches—a plant in bloom is a show spot 
in the garden. The sweet scented flow- 
ers are full centered with broad wavy 
petals gracefully overlapping. Colors from 
deep orange to lemon yellow. Pkt. 15¢.; 
4b OZ. 30c.; 3 oz. 50c. 
No. 966. Early Sunshine. A and flower, 
showy in the garden and ideal for cut- 
ting. The 2% inch chrysanthemum-like 
flowers are golden yellow, curled and in- 
terlaced. Blooms in 15 weeks from plant- 
ing. Pkt. 15c.; % oz. 6Oo, 
No. 971. Dwarf Double Harmony. Charm- 
ing and distinct, with tubular deep 
orange center, flanked by broad velvety 
dark maroon guard tals; attractive and 
unique; one foot high. Pkt. 10c.; 3 oz. 25c. 
No. 963. Crown of Gold. <A gold medal win- 
ner. The crown is of curled and inter- 
laced petals surrounded by a collar of 
gracefully recurved petals; bright golden 
orange. Odorless foliage; sweet scented. 
Two feet high. Pkt. 100.; i oz, 30c. 
No. 962. Yellow Supreme. Imagine a large 
fluffy, rounded bloom of honey fragrance 
with broad, loose frilled petals of a rich 
creamy yellow color, and you have ‘Yel- 
low Supreme.” <A ‘wonderful cut flower. 
Pkt. 10c.; 4 oz. 30c. 
No. 965. Guinea Gold. Distinct from all 
other marigolds; they are more like car- 
nations with their long loosely placed 
waved petals. The plants bear 30 to 40 
flowers, 2 to 24 inches across, of a bril- 
liant shade of orange flushed with gold. 
Pkt. 100.; 3 oz. 25c. 
No. 960. African Double Orange. Intense 
rich orange double blooms, Pkt. 10c.; 
2 oz. 25c. 
No. 961. African Double Lemon Queen. Fure 
canary yellow. Pkt. 100.; 3 oz. 25c. 
No. 964. African Double Mixed. All the 
best varieties. Pkt. 60.; 4 oz. 20c.; 4 oz. 30c. 
No. 968. French Double Mixed. A mixture 
of the finest sorts. Pkt. 60.; 4 oz. 200; 
4 Oz. 30c. 
No. 969. Miniature Marigold—Splendid for 
bedding, borders and pots. Neat, compact 
plants, covered with perfectly double flow- 
ers. Pkt. 10c.; 4 0z. 35c. 
No. 967. Legion of Honor (Little Brownie), 
Golden yellow with velvety brown center; 
single. Pkt. 10c.; 3 oz. 30c. 
NEWER MARIGOLDS 
No. 972. Goldsmith—Golden orange with 
good stems for cutting. The large fully 
double flowers bloom freely on strong 
bushy plants. The beautifully twisted 
petals give it a chrysanthemum-like ap- 
pearance, Fine for garden display and 
cut flowers. Pkt. 15c.; 4% oz. 50c. 
No. 970. Scarlet Glow—Flowers open deep 
scarlet, later turning to rich tangerine. 
Fully double, 13 to 2 inches across and 
borne profusely on 10-inch plants. 
Blooms in 10 weeks; stems long enough 
for cutting. Pkt, 15c.; 4% oz. 50c. 
No. 958. Spry—Flowers 134 inches across; 
bright clear crested centers surrounded 
by rows of mahogany-red guard petals. 
9 inches high, spreading 15 inches, just 
right for borders and edgings. Blooms 
in 9 weeks, Pkt. 20c, 

MIGNONETTE 
In February and March plant in boxes 
and thin out. Beginning in March, plant at 
intervals outside for a succession; in late 
summer plant in pots or boxes for winter 
blooming. Thin to 6 inches apart. Hardy 
annual. One foot high. 
No. 976. Wood’s Superb Mixture—Made up 
of the newest and best sorts, all shades 
of color and varieties which produce the 
largest flower-spikes, some 12 to 15 inches 
long. Deliciously fragrant. Pkt. 10c.; 2 
oz. 20c.; 4 oz. 35c. 
No. 982. Sweet Mignonette—Fragrant; large 
flowering, Pkt. 5c.; 4 oz. 20c.; 0z. 30c. 
No. 988. Moonflower 
(EVENING GLORY.) Rapid climber with 
luxuriant foliage; the pure white fragrant 
blooms, 4 to 6 inches in diameter, open in 
the evening and on cloudy days. Grows 
30 feet or more. File a hole in the seeds 
or soak for a day to hasten germination. 
Pkt. 10c.; 4 oz. 25c.; oz. 35c. 
MORNING GLORIES 

Scarlet O’Hara Morunivg Glory 
No. 990. Scarlet O’Hara. All-American Gold 
Medal Winner. A new color—rich dark 
wine-red. The 3}-inch blooms come early, 
continue till frost, and stay open longer, 
often in the afternoon. Pkt. 10c.; 3 oz. 35c, 
No. 989. Heavenly Blue. A luxuriant vine 
bearing beautiful sky blue flowers about 
4 inches across. Pkt. 10c.; 3% 02, 30¢.; 
3 oz, 50c. 
No. 993. Brazilian (Ipomea setosa). A lux- 
uriant annual, growing 30 to 40 feet, and 
makes a thick shade. The flowers are 
3 to 4 inches across, and of a beautiful 
rose color. Excellent for porches or ar- 
bors, covering an enormous space in a 
short time. Pkt. 10c.; 4% oz. 20c. 
No. 994. Morning Glory (Convolvulus). All 
colors mixed, Pkt. 5c.; oz. 15c. 
No, 995. Bush Morning Glory. Twelve inch- 
es high; adapted for bedding, pot and 
window culture; blooms profusely. Mixed 
colors. Pkt. 5c.; 4 oz. 15c. 
No. 1085. Passion Flower 
Splendid hardy annual climber, _bearing 
attractive fringed flowers; derives its 
name from its resemblance to a _ Cross, 
Height 10 feet. Pkt. 10c.; § 02. 25c. 
Page Fifteen 
Japanese Morning Glories 
Grand climbers, the flowers measuring 4 
to 6 inches across in limitless variety of 
colors. The foliage is ornamental—some 
mottled and checkered; some _ rich, vivid 
green, others silvery white, others yellow. 
Soak 24 hours before planting. 
No. 999. Fancy Fringed Japanese. The 
flowers are as big as saucers, ruffled from 
stem to margin like crumpled velvet. 
Pkt. 10c.; 3 oz. 25c.; oz. 40c. 
No. 10C0. Single Imperial Japanese. The 
original variety. ‘The wonderful color- 
ings of both flowers and foliage are be- 
yond description. Pkt. 5c.; 4 oz. 15c.; 
oz. 25c. 
No. 1050. Nemophila 
(LOVE GROVE)—Attractive hardy an- 
nual, 6 inches high, bearing its bright 
flowers in great profusion. Hasily grown. 
Pkt. 10c.; 4 oz. 20c. 
No. 1054. Nicotiana 
(FLOWERING TOBACCO)—Covered with 
bloom all summer and fall, flowering a 
few weeks after sowing. Pkt. 10c.; 
Z OZ. 20c, 
No. 1058. Nigella Miss Jekyll 
(LOVE-IN-A-MIST)—Lovely  cornflower 
blue, semi-double, blooms on long stems, 
Splendid cut flower, requires little care. 
Hardy annual. Height, 1 foot. Pkt. 5c.; 
4 OZ 15c, 
WOOD’S 
PEERLESS NASTURTIUMS 
No annual will produce a more lavish 
profusion of blooms for so long a time, 
nor more variety of color than nastur- 
tiums. They begin blooming early and 
yield a continuous display of brilliant color 
till frost. The more you cut the flowers 
the more profusely will the plants produce 
blooms. You can grow them in eny suil; 
in fact, they co well in soils too poor to 
support other plants. Rich soil produces 
foliage at the expense of the blooms. Plant 
an inch deep after the ground becomes 
warm, dropping 2 ‘seeds every 3 inches. 
They shoulr not be transplanted. Do not 
water too freely. 
Wood’s Peerless Mixtures 
Our Peerless Nasturtium Mixtures are 
made up exclusively of the most elegant 
large flowered single varieties, and cover 
a wide range of the most brilliant colors 
that give a profusion of gorgeous blooms. 
You will be delighted with our Peerless 
Mixtures, 
No. 1010. Dwarf Peerless Mixture—Pkt. 
10c.; 0z. 15c.; 4 1b. 40c.; lb. $1.25, postpaid. 
No. 1030. Tall Peerless Mixture—Pkt, 10c.; 
oz. 15c.; 4 lb. 40c.; lh. $1.25, postpaid. 
Dwarf Double Sweet-Scented 
Globe Nasturtiums 
The globe type is the very newest thing 
in nasturtiums. The plants are dwarf, neat 
and compact, 10 to 12 inches in height, with 
a spread of 12 to 15 inches. As they 
maintain their dwarf rounded form through- 
out the life of the plant they are especially 
fine for rockeries, window boxes and pot 
plants, and superb in the garden for borders 
and edgings. The blooms are delightfully 
sweet, double and semi-double, and have 
stems of good length for cutting. 
No. 1014. Dwarf Double Scarlet Globe. 
Fiery scarlet blooms are borne in great 
profusion. Pkt. 10c.; oz. 25c.; 3 lb. 65c. 
No. 1008. Dwarf Golden Globe, As many 
as 100 blooms have been found on a 
single plant. Pkt. 10c.; oz. 20c.; 3 lb. 45c. 
No.1012. Dwarf Double Gem. All the many 
colors of globe nasturtiums are in our 
splendid mixture. Pkt. 10c.; oz. 20c.; 
3 Ib. 45, 
Sweet-Scented Double Gream 
Nasturtiums 
The introduction of the gleam type of 
nasturtium created a sensation, it being 
the first of the double and semi-double 
blooming strains. The plants are semi- 
dwarf, throwing out short runners from the 
well rounded free flowering busaes. The 
stems are long and bear flowers well above 
the lush green foliage, the effect being a 
solid mass of color. The blooms are large 
and exquisitely sweet scented. A fine cut 
flower. ; 
No. 1013. Double Scarlet Gleam. Compara- 
ble to the brilliance of scarlet sage. Pkt. 
LOc:3. oz. 15c.3\ 4 Lb. Sdc. 
No. 1011, Double Golden Gleam, In full 
bloom the plants are a blaze of glory. 
Pkt. 10c.; oz. 15c.; 3 lb. 35c. 
No. 1009. Double Glorious Gleam Hybrids. 
Colors never dreamed of in nasturtiums 
are borne in profusion. Pkt. 10c.; ob. 15¢.; 
3 Th. 350, 
