Tork, 
ha 


3177 MARIGOLD Gigantea Pot-o-Gold. Pkt. 25c. 

Sister of Fteavenly Blue 
Culture: A or B, D or E, Page 65 
2943. Morning Glory Improved Pearly Gates. 
This is a white sport of the lovely Heavenly Blue 
morning glory, and is similar in size, vigor of growth 
and abundant bloom, to that unsurpassed climber; 
but the color is satiny white with cream throat. 
It is effective in combination with blue and red 
morning glories. Pkt., 25c. 
2938 Morning Glory Columbia. 6 The vines . 
grow about 10 ft. high and are covered with attractive 
foliage and produce many 3 in. trumpets of blue, 
edged bluish white with a reddish star. Pkt., 25c. 


3932 PETUNIA All Double America. 
Giant HN arigolds 
3177. Dwarf Gigantea Pot O’Gold. 12 inch. 
Plants are compact, well branched, bearing large 
blooms of bright deep orange. The flowers are some- 
what loosely formed, with broad heavy petals, grace- 
fully overlapping. Blooms early. Pkt., 25c. 
3153 Goldsmith. The best version of the Chrys- 
anthemum flowered Marigold which blossoms early 
enough for northern gardens. Globular flower with in- 
curved petals, borne on long base branching stems, 3 feet 
tall. Pkt., 25c. 
3127 Limelight. A pale pruntces yellow or deep 
cream, in the incurved hrysanthemum-flowered 
type. Early-flowering, 14-24% inches in diameter, 
free-flowering and coming quite true. Pkt., 15c. 
3163B Yellow Pygmy. 8 in. Light lemon-yellow, 
Lilliput French double. Small, 114 in. blooms, rather 
free and exciting for edging beds. Use in front of 
calendulas or combine with the deep blue of ageratum 
Cardinal Mundelein (plants only). Pkt., 15c. 

4054 Petunia Golden Jubilee. 4 A most attrac- 
tive variety with its fringed, 34-inch flowers of bright 
carmine, tinged scarlet, with golden throat. Pkt., 35c. 
Deep Violet Nicrembergia 
Culture: D or E, Page 65 
3412 Nierembergia Coerulea Purple Robe. 
This is like the pale lavender hippomanica, in its com- 
pact growth, completely covered with bloom, but its 
flowers are of deep violet, unfading in the hot sun, 
where hippomanica would bleach to almost white. 
Blooms in 15 weeks from sowing, prefers sandy soil 
ie ie sun, a splendid bedding and edging subject. 
Lobe Cc, 



Pkt., 50c. 
New Petunias 
Culture: A, B, D or E, Page 65 
3932 Petunia All Double America. Distinctly 
different from all Double Petunias and 100% true for 
doubleness. The first double ever created in America. 
Branching erect, the plants develop into trim little 
plants 1 ft. high and 18 in wide. Graceful fully double 
rose pink flowers up to 2144 in. Leaves smaller than 
other varieties with almost entire lack of stickiness. 
rr ae seeds), 50c; 2 pkts., for 90c; 1,000 seeds, 


Racine, Wisconsin, August 16, 1943 
“T would like to tell you that the All America DouMe 
Petunia I raised from seed from you look like little 
rose bushes, everyone admires them so.”,—R. W 

3982 Petunia English Violet. This rosy mauve- 
violet-or purple-violet, medium-sized, compact variety 
brings a distinct new color to its class. With the habit 
of Blue Bedder, this very free-flowering plant of 12 to 
15 inches is true and uniform. Pkt., 25c. 
4083 Petunia Blushing Maid. Its single flowers 
are of largest size, deeply fringed and ruffled, of a rosy 
pink and white with yellow veins and throat. One of 
the loveliest giant singles. Pkt., 35c. 
4022 King Henry. Compact, globular habit, large 
blooms of a velvety blood red color on short stems. 
A dwarf Flaming Velvet. Pkt., 25c. 
3973 Petunia Igloo. All-America Bronze Medal 
1943. The most uniform, free-blooming, dwarf white 
Petunia so far developed. Plants are true, very uni- 
form and compact growing. 12 to 15 inches tall. The 
small, 1%-inch, creamy white single flowers with 
yellowish throats, cover the plants in a sheet of bloom 
from early to late. Exce!lent and very showy for bed 
or border. Pkt., 25c. 
eae 
PETUNIA Blushing Maid, Pkt, 35¢. 


