heaMever Seed Go. 
Novelties for Your Flower-Garden 
Please read this particular page carefully, because it describes the 
newest and most improved varieties in the Annual Flower line. We are 
sure that you will want to try most of them in your garden this season. 
AGERATUM, MIDGET BLUE 
Silver Medal, 1940. A dwarf, compact plant, 3 to 4 inches tall, covered with rich 
azure-blue flowers. Fine for edging. Pkt. 15c; large pkt. 25c. 
ANTIRRHINUM (SNAPDRAGON) 
<e\ ROSALIE. Bronze Medal, 1940. This new variety of the large-flowering type is 
rust-resistant. An outstanding cut-flower. It is best described as intense rose-pink 
with large individual blooms on strong spikes. Pkt. 15c; large pkt. 25c. 
SUPER -MAJESTIC RUSTPROOF. Healthy, base-branching plants with long 
stems for cutting. A wide range of splendid colors in a superb mixture. Pkt. 15c; 
large pkt. 25c. 
ASTERS, EARLY CALIFORNIA GIANTS 
A new early-blooming strain with immense flowers held erect 
on splendid stems. Plants grow 2% to3 feet tall and are generous 
with their superb flowers. 
APPLE BLOSSOM. Dainty shell-pmk. Pkt. 15c. 
CRIMSON. Pkt. 15c. 
PURPLE. Dark purplish violet. Pkt. 15c. 
NAVY BLUE. Mid-blue. Pkt. 15c. 
WHITE. Pure white. Pkt. 15c. 
MIXED. All the colors. Pkt. 15c; large pkt. 25c. 
CALENDULA, YELLOW COLOSSAL 
Perhaps the largest Calendula ever troduced. Flowers are 
warm golden yellow, noted for their vigorous growth and their 
pleasingly curled petals and compact form. Pkts. 15c and 25c. 
CLEOME, PINK QUEEN 
Silver Medal. Flowers of this fine Spider Plant open clear 
pink and turn white. Bloom is in 6-inch heads which extend 
themselves as the lower flowers turn into seeds so that it is 
never out of bloom from early summer to frost. Pkt. 25c. 
COSMOS, YELLOW FLARE 
Silver Medal. This splendid cutting flower is a golden 
yellow form of the original Orange Flare. Plants grow about 
4 feet tall, come into bloom very early, and bloom profusely 
until Iate fall. Pkt. 15c. 
DELPHINIUM, PACIFIC GIANTS 
ROUND TABLE SERIES. This represents all the color com- 
binations in this group, the result of some three hundred crosses 
in 1940. The florets are of real exhibition size and the spikes 
are magnificent. Pkt. 25c.; large pkt. 50c. 
IPOMOEA (MORNING-GLORY) 
PEARLY GATES. Silver Medal. A sport of the beautiful 
Heavenly Blue and like it in every respect except color. 
The 3-inch trumpets of Pearly Gates are satiny white with 
creamy throats. Plant with Heavenly Blue for a picture. Pkt. 15c. 
SCARLETT O’HARA. Gold Medal, 1939. This carmine- 
red Morning-Glory is a great addition to our list of climbing 
plants. The vines are vigorous in their growth and the 
flowers are truly spectacular. Pkt. 10c; large pkt. 25c. 
LARKSPUR, PINK PERFECTION 
This new pink-flowering variety of the Giant Imperial Larkspur 
is worthy a place in everybody’s garden. The large individual 
florets are closely set on long stems. Plants average 3 to 4 feet 
in height. Pkt. 15c; large pkt. 25c. - 

Marigold, Butterball 
MARIGOLD 
BUTTERBALL. Bronze Medal. Compact little bushy plants 
6 to 8 inches tall covered with tufted pompons of rich 
butter-yellow from early July until frost. An unsurpassed 
bedding plant for mass of yellow color. Pkt. 15c. 
<<, MISSION GIANTS, GOLDSMITH. Bronze Medal, 1941. 
Beautiful, compact flowers of rich golden orange. The 
plants are strong-growing, branching freely from the base, 
and producing a heavy crop of bloom. See illustration on third 
cover: Pkt..15c.; large pkt. 25c. 
MIXED. A fine mixture In orange and yellow tones. Pkt. 15c. 
(a) SPRY. Silver Medal, 1941. This prize-winner Is a great 
improvement over the favorite, Harmony. Several rows of 
maroon petals surround a lovely tuft of golden orange. 
Low, bushy plants hidden by masses of bloom. Pkt. 15c. 
NIEREMBERGTA, PURPLE ROBE 
Bronze Medal, 1942. A very fine deep violet-purple form of 
the popular Nierembergia bippomanica. It maintains its 
deep color, does not fade, has a neat compact, free-flowering 
habit and blooms from seed in 15 weeks. Plants grow 4 to 6 inches 
high. Pkt. 25c. 
PETUNIA 
IGLOO. Bronze Medal, 1943. The new extra-compact white 
Petunia. Its chief advantages are its free-blooming habit and 
its compact and uniform growth. We have never seen a 
Petunia that continues to have such a wealth of blooms through- 
out the entire summer. The flowers are medium size, pure white 
with a slight yellowing in the throat, and are 100 per cent true. 
Every flower is just exactly alike. The fact that the plant re- 
mains so uniformly compact throughout the entire season (if the 
soil is not too rich) makes it ideal for borders. Every plant ts a 
perfect mound of white, 8 to 10 inches high, reminding one of an 
Eskimo igloo. Pkt. 25c. 
ENGLISH VIOLET. Honorable Mention, 1943. A new and 
much more pleasing shade of violet-blue Petunia than any of 
the other mid-blue varieties. It is almost the same beautiful 
color as English violets. All the flowers on a plant are the same 
shade and hold this uniform color from the time they first open 
until the Iast bloom. What is more, every plant is the same. They 
normally grow 15 to 18 inches tall. Pkt. 25c. 
SCABIOSA, BLUE MOON 
tlonorable Mention, 1939. Here is a new Scabiosa of deep 
lavender-blue. Worthy of attention because of its large, 
almost globular flower-heads. The plants are upright in 
growth and noted for their vigor. Pkt. 15c; large pkt. 25c. 
ZINNIA 
BLACK RUBY. Bronze Medal, 1941. Lovely little pom- 
pons of deep velvety maroon. The plants are about 18 
inches tall and come into bloom early. Pkt. 10c. 
SUPER CROWN O’GOLD, PASTEL TINTS. This new varia- 
tion in the Zinnia flower is indeed a welcome and a pleasing 
one. See third cover. Pkt. 10c; large pkt. 25c. 

34-36 Light St., Baltimore 2, Md. 
Novelties 

