LINARIA 
Exquisite blossoms like fairy Snapdragons. 
LINARIA TRISTIS HYBRIDA—erx(8)8. Gray-frosted foli- 
age. Pretty blossoms in rare variations; white, cream, 
old gold, oronge, smoky rose, chestnut, mahogany or sil- 
vered violet. Always there is a blotch of ochre, crimson or 
purple. Best treated as annual. Pkt 15c; 3 for 40c. 
LINARIA BROUSSONNETI—erx(8)10. Fine wide fur- 
thickets of lettuce-green, set continuously with pretty flow- 
ers. May to November. The blossoms are racemes of little 
golden snapdragons, with orange lip. Pkt. 15c. 3 
LINARIA MAROCANNA SPLENDID MIXED—erx(2-3)12. 
Graceful spikes of dainty little Snapdragons in white, crim- 
son-and-gold, lavender, chamois, blue-violet and rose. Pkt. 
10c; 144 oz. 25c. 
LINARIA PANCICI — ecbx(2-3). Odd blossoms of rich 
yellow with bright orange lip, in long profusion. Foliage 
blue-gray. Grows to 18 inches first year, flowering freely 
»s an annual, though safely perennial, and finally reaching 
3 feet. Illustrated page 40. Pkt. 10c; 3 for 25c. 
LINARIA VENTRICOSA—ecrbkt(3-5)30. A very different 
Linaria, and a very desirable one. Many close slender 
racemes of fairly large flowers, soft butter-yellow in un- 
derlying color, but so closely pin-striped with red-orange 
that they are all of a ruddy glow. Foliage narrow, silvery. 
From the Canaries. Pkt. 20c; 3 for 50c. 
OFFER 26A24—One pkt. each of above for 60c. 
LINARIA ANNUAL MIXED—Above, with. others. 
15e. 
LUPINUS ANNUAL 
Sow seeds early 
Pkt. 
Lupinus can be a very showy annual. 
while soil is cool. NANUS—10 inches. Indigo, marked 
white. Particularly good. Pkt. 10c; % oz. 25c. HART- 
WEGGI MIXED—24 inches. Long graceful spikes in rose, 
pink, white or blue. Pkt. 10ce; % oz. 25c. SUBCAR- 
NOSUS—18 inches. Big, bright blue flowers over silky 
foliage. Bluebonnet. Pkt. 10c; % oz. 25ec. TRUNCATUS 
—15 inches. Blood-red blossoms that age to purple. Pkt. 
10c. OFER 27A24—One pkt. each of the four for 35c. 
A half-hour when sun is low, garden beyond. | 


LOPEZIA CORONATA—ebk(w) (2-4)30. 
Gayety from Mexico. Flowers of encar- 
mined rose-brilliance like little butter- 
flies, climb all summer and autumn long 
the ever-lengthening stems. The flowers 
are carried in a placement that sug- 
gests open, intricately jewelled coro- 
nets. Also grown as a hanging basket 
plant, the stems under glass assuming 
decumbent habit instead of remaining 
upright as in the garden. Illustrated 
opposite, Pkt. 15c. 
MALACOTHRIX CALIFORNICA—ek(2) 
10. Large, fully double flowers of 
creamy primrose, deepening at center to 
clear lemon-gold. Handsome, free- 
blooming annual, easy if sown while 
soil is cool. Pkt. 15c. 
MALOPE TRIFIDA-—bx(2-3)38. Branching plants 
large salver flowers of crimson. Pkt. 10c. 
MALVA MAURITIANA—eck(3-5)60. Excellent tall and 
showy annual. Large, attractive flowers of rich rose, 
striped crimson, great pyramids of them. Pkt. 10ce. 
MALVA MOSCHATA MIXED—ex(3)30. Sheafs of pink 
and white. Sow early for first-year bloom. Pkt. 10c. 
MATRICARIA (Feverfew)—eicrbk(8)10. Valned for edevings 
or for cutting. Intensely doubled little flowers. All season. 
Profuse. GOLDEN BALL, rich yellow. Pkt. 10c. SNOW- 
BALL—Purest white. Pkt. 10c. MULTIFLORA—Smaller 
double flowers in larger clusters. Deep yellow. Pkt. 15c. 
MADIA ELEGANS 
A flower for that shady corner. In sun the blossoms 
close during mid-section of the day, but in shade they 
stay open right through. The flowers are daisies about an 
inch across, most of this in the three-cleft feathery petal- 
age. The petals are rich yellow, but with a base blotch 
of red-brown on each, forming a zoning ring of contrast. 
Blossoms are carried in clusters on three-foot downy-leafed 
plants. Easy to grow and easy to like. Pkt. 15c; 8 for 40c. 

carry 

[ 25 ] 
MARIGOLD DIVERSITIES 
—and they might have been termed Marigold excellencies. 
Easy to grow, and to enjoy, are these opulent beauties. 
86 in. Fully double 
ecx. IDABELLE FIRESTONE—Hyb., 
flowers of red-mahogany. Long stems. Pkt. 15c; ;;0z. 25c. 
GIANT LEMON-BALL—Afr., 34 in. .Immense formal 
lemon yellow balls. Pkt. 15c; % oz. 30c. GIANT ORANGE 
BALL—Afr., 34 in. Like last, but rich orange. Pkt. 15c; 
% oz. 30c. GOLDSMITH—Afr., 18 in. Four-inch flowers 
like incurved Chrysanthemums of deepest orange gold. 
Pkt. 15e. LIMELIGHT—Afr., 20 in. Soft creamy primrose, 
lightest color in Marigolds. Intensely double petals in- 
curved, curled, interlaced. Pkt. 15c; % oz. 25ce. POT 
O’GOLD—Afr., 14 in. Massive, fully double flowers of deep 
golden orange, full-centered, with broad, over-lapping petals. 
Sturdy dwarf. Pkt. 15¢c. GUINEA GOLD—Afr., 30 in. 
Loosely ruffled Carnation-like flowers in gold-toned orange. 
One of the better kinds. Pkt. 10c; 1% oz. 20c. SUNSET 
GIANTS—Afr., 45 in. Flowers largest of all, sometimes 6 
inches across, but exceedingly variable in size, formation, 
color and degree of doubleness. Majority will be double. 
Many yellow and orange tones. Spectacular. Pkt. 15c; 
vz oz. 25c. FLAMING FIRE—Fr., 25 in. Big single flow- 
ers, bold and gorgeous in patterns of red and maroon on 
lemon and gold. Pkt. 10c; % oz. 20c. SCARLET GLOW 
—Fr., 10 in. Brightest of Marigolds, near-scarlet at first, 
ageing to tangerine. Fully double. Showy. Pkt. 15c. 
ROYAL SCOT—Fr., 18 in. Fully double. Broad petals, 
striped mahogany on gold. Pkt. 10c; % oz. 20c. LEGION 
OF HONOR—Fr., 10 in. Showy, long-blooming edger or 
bedder. Single, yellow splashed red-brown. Pkt. 10c; 4 
oz. 25c. TAGETES TENUIFOLIA—Signet Marigold. 10 
inches. Daintiest of all, foliage lacy, flowers small, single, 
profuse, in varied yellows. Pkt. 10c; %& oz. 25ce. HAR- 
MONY—15 inches. A strain of French Marigold in wide 
range of richer colorings, blossoms fully double. Pkt. 10c; 
- £5 20c. OFFER 28A24—One pkt. each of the 14 for 
1.40. 
MARIGOLD DISPLAY JUNIOR—The lower kinds, above 
and others, that usually do not exceed 20 inches. Will 
make marvelous showing. Pkt. 10c; 4% oz. 30c. 
MARIGOLD DISPLAY SENIOR—The taller kinds, those 
averaging from 20 inches of height up. Here’s for gay 
surprise. Pkt. 10c; 44 oz. 30c. 
MIMULUS, RICHLY TINTED 
Blossoms in alluring Orchid suggestion and in colorings 
exotic, ranging through cardinal, copper crimson, blue- 
lavender, pink, rose and yellow, this sometimes red- 
splashed. Sow early, with care fine seed needs, shade at 
first, See that soil is rich and that plants do not lack 
watering in drought. Thus you may pleasure yourself 
much, for Mimulus is quite delightfully different from 
other flowers of the garden. Offered in mixture. Pkt. 15c: 
3 pkts. for 40c. (See TREASURE CHEST for separate 
kinds). 
THE WONDER-FLOWER 
They are, of course, Mirabilis, 
ness. UNIFLORA—30 inches. 
trumpet-in-trumpet form, the long-tubed blossoms rising 
from a much-ruffled second “flower” of the same vivid 
rose. Pkt. 15e. VISCOSA—Ten-O’clock Flower. 36 inches. 
Blossoms brilliant rose purple in high graceful sprays 
over attractive foliage. Along with the true flowers are 
innumerable bloom-simulates in crinkly, silky, buff-tan. 
Pkt. 15ce. _JALAPA—Marvel of Peru (or Four O’clock of 
pre-war time). White, yellow, rose, red, pink, lilac, flow- 
ers sometimes tricolor. Makes quick hedge. 24 inches. 
Pkt. 10c; % oz. 20c. DICHOTOMA—DLong-tubed blossoms 
of blush white. Fragrant. Pkt. 10c. OFFER 29A24—One 
annuals of much showi- 
Bright rose flowers of 
pkt. each of above for 40c. 
a oe 
One man may pull ten thousand, but ten thousand 
eannot always pull one man. 

SWEET MIGNONETTE—ecobx(2-3)12. 
grance. Easily grown. 
Loved for its fra- 
Sow where plants are to stand, 
then thin. We offer a blend, red, golden, white and cop- 
pery in mixture, big fluffy spikes, long-blooming forms 
puiteble for either garden or pot culture. Pkt. 10c; % 
Oz. c. 
MIMOSA PUDICA—k(3)12. Sensitive Plant. Fluffy, pale 
pink flowers. Pretty, pinnate leaves that fold up when 
touched. May be grown in garden, or in pots. Pkt. 15c, 
MOONFLOWER—See Ipomoea. 
MYOSOTIS—See Forget-me-not, 
