Balcony Petunias 
A low, trailing type of Petunia par- 
ticularly useful in window boxes as 
well as for formal beds and edging. 
3047 Brilliant Rose. 
Pkt. 10c.,3 pkts. 25c., 1/16 oz. $1.00 
3050 Cornflower Blue. 
Pkt. 15c., 3 pkts. 35¢., 1/16 oz. $1.50 
3053 Pure White. 
Pkt. 15c., 3 pkts. 35c., 1/16 oz. $1.50 
3056 Velvety Red. 
Pkt. 25c., 3 pkts. 60c,, 1/16 oz. $2.00 
3059 Violet Blue. 
Pkt. 15c., 3 pkts. 35c., 1/16 oz. $1.50 
3062 Choice Mixed. 
Pkt. 10c., 3 pkts. 25¢., 1% oz. $1.25 
Giant Double Flowering 
3085 Rose Queen. Lovely fringed 
and ruffled flowers of exquisite rose- 
pink. Pkt. 50c., 3 pkts. $1.25 
3087 Madonna. Large flowers of the 
purest white, elegantly frilled and 

fringed. Pkt. 50c/, 3 pkts. $1.25 
3089 Mixed Colors. Exceptionally Z Li : : 
fine. Remarkable gigantic blooms Single Bedding Flaming Velvet 
of the finest texture. 
Pkt. 35c., 3 pkts. 85c. 
All Double Victorious 
Magnificent fringed and ruffled 
blooms. The only strain which will 
produce practically 100 per cent double 
flowers. Height 10 inches. 
3092 Blue Brocade. Silver Medal, 
1941, A.A.S. Dwarf, stocky plants 
with giant, fully double deeply 
fringed blooms of true violet blue; 
a deep rich shade. 
Pkt. 50c., 3 pkts. $1.25 
3095 Gaiety. Large frilled, double 
blooms; light rose-red and white. 
Pkt. 50c., 3 pkts. $1.25 
3098 Loveliness. Immense double 
clear pink blooms, deeply frilled. 
Pkt. 50c., 3 pkts. $1.25 
3102 Orchid Beauty. Semi-double 
and double blooms of light lilac 
heavily veined with deeper lilac or 
violet. Pkt. 50c., 3 pkts. $1.25 
3105 Rosy Carmine. Huge, fully 
double, fringed flowers; often de- 
scribed as the ‘Queen of all 
Petunias.”’ Pkt. 50c., 3 pkts. $1.25 
3108 White Victorious. Handsome 
clear white double fringed blooms. 
Pkt. 50c., 3 pkts. $1.25 
3111 Dwarf Victorious Mixed. AI 
colors. Pkt. 50c., 3 pkts. $1.25 
EW/ 
_—7 


Petunia, Ruffled Giants, Mixed 
PETUNIAS ce eaty % grow 
Outstanding among garden flowers. Few are more colorful 
and useful and none are easier to grow. The plants are hardy; 
seeds may be sown as early in the Spring as the ground 
is workable; the seedlings transplant easily and from 
early Summer until late Fall they bear a glori- 
ous profusion of large, handsome blooms. 
One precaution: the seeds are very fine 
and must not be buried. Simple scatter 
them over the surface of well pre- 
pared and finely pulverized 
soil and gently press them 
into the ground with a 
flat board. Deep 
planting is usu- 
ally the rea- 
son for dis- 
appoint- 
ment. 
Petunias Flower Incessantly 
Ail Summer Long 
= = 

















7” PETUNIA 
Honorable Mention, 1942 A.A.S. 
The blooms are deeply ruffled 
and are of the “Giants of Califor- 
nia’’ type. The color is a rich sal- 
mon-rose, with soft tan veining on 
a creamy buff background deep in 
the wide-open throat. It begins to 
bloom early in the summer and 
continues to flower freely and with- 
out lapse until frost checks it late 
in the fall. ‘‘Glamour”’ is illus- 
trated here in full color—a true re- 
production of a direct color photo- 
graph taken in our trial grounds. 
It really is the richest colored and 
the most gloriously beautiful 
Petunia that we have ever seen. 
“Pkt. 35¢ 
