
















FORBES FLOWERS OF SPECIAL MERIT FOR 1944 
Here are some worth-while strains you should try this year. They are fine specialties of extremely high quality and 
will well repay you. All are easy to grow and we believe will please you better than the strains you have been using. 
New Petunia, Cheerful. All-America Winner 1944 
Here’s a brand-newcolor in dwarf bedding Petunias—clear salmon-pink with a satiny sheen and deeper rose veining 
toward the throat. A cheerful color giving sparkle and sprightliness to any flower border. The blooms, 2/4 inches across, 
are produced in great abundance from May right up to frost, on plants which first grow low, spreading close to the ground 
and later form dense compact mounds, 10 to 12 inches high and 2 feet across, with no tendency to have open centers. Cheer- 
ful is unsurpassed for garden beds and borders and useful for cutting. Pkt. 25c.; Ajoz. 65c.; #s0z. $2; lgoz. $6. 
Marigold, Mammoth Mum. All-America Winner 1944 
This is the largest of the incurved Chrysanthemum-flowered Marigolds. The strong, bushy, 3-foot, erect, dark-foliaged 
\ plants from August to frost bear long-stemmed, fluffy, ball-like, pale sulphur-yellow flowers of huge size, 314 to 4 inches 
_. > across and 2 inches deep. These blooms, made up of countless, finely cut, incurved petals intricately intertwined, are 
—.._\ magnificent for cutting and make a striking display. Pkt. 25c.; js0z. 65c.; Moz. $2. 
Gaillardia, Pinwheel 
ee Well named, this new annual Gaillardia is very unique and provides excellent cut-flowers through a very long period. 
y: The single flowers, 21% inches across, are intense wine-red at the center, shading to cherry-pink toward the outside with 
ae: large petal tips of silvery gray-white. The easily grown plants are 15 inches high. Pkt. 20c.; d;0z. 50c.; 4oz. $1.50. 
ic 
Petunia, Cheerful Marigold, Mammoth Mum 

