












KEY TO SYMBOLS 
The symbols after the 
name of each flower 
give you the following 
information: 
(a)—Annual 
(b)—Biennial 
(hp)—Hardy Perennial 
(hhp)—Half-hardy Per- 
ennial 
e—Suited to full shade 
#—Suited to semi-shade 
For key to cultures see 
page 31. 
AGERATUM (a) 
Culture II. Cover Y%-in. Ht. various. 
Blooms early summer to frost. 
Blue Cap—New, dwarf. Rich, deep 
blue. 6-in. plants. Pkt. l5c. 
Blue Perfection—Deep amethyst-blue. 
9-in. plants. 
Midget Blue—1940 All-America. Com- 
pact 2 to 3-in. plants. Azure blue. Pkt. 
20c. 
ALYSSUM (a) @ 
ANNUALS. Culture II. Cover %4-in. Ht. 
various. Blooms early summer to frost. 
Carpet of Snow—White flowers. Plants 
about 114 ft. across and only 3-in. high. 
Little Gem—Clouds of honey-scented 
white flowers. 
Lilac Queen — Lavender-lilac flowers, 
6-in. plants. 
Violet Queen — Dwarf, compact, free 
flowering. Small, sweetly scented flow- 
ers; rich, deep shade of violet. Pkt. l5c. 
ALYSSUM (hp) ¢ 
PERENNIALS. Culture VII. Cover 1%- 
in. Ht. 3 to 9 in. Blooms early spring. 
Saxatile Compactum (Gold Dust)— 
Brilliant golden-yellow flowers and 
grayish-green foliage on compact, 
spreading plants. Favorite for rock 
gardens. 12 in. 
ANCHUSA, Blue Bird (a) @—Culture 
II, Cover seeds ¥g-in. Sprays of indigo 
blue flowers; 20 to 24-in. compact plants. 
ANTIRRHINYM (a) 
(Snapdragon) 
Culture I. Cover %-in. Ht. various. Sow 
early. They germinate slowly. 
Maximum (Tallest Varieties)—Rust- 
resistant. Best for wealth of flower 
spikes. Mixed. Pkt. 15c. 
Large Flowered (Tall Giant)—A fine 
strain for bedding or cutting as the 
24 
AQUILEGIA 
spikes are heavy and long. Mixed. Pkt. 
15c. 
Super Majestic (Semi-tall) — Large 
flowers on semi-tall plant. Rust-proof. 
A fine mixture of colors in this type. 
Mixed. Pkt. 15c. 
Half-Dwarf (Large Flowered)—Very 
good for bedding. Heavy spikes and 
good length. Large blooms. Mixed. 
Pkt. 15c. 
AQUILEGIA (Columbine) (hp) @— 
Culture VII. Cover ¥%-in. Ht. 1% to 2- 
ft. Prefers light shade, fairly rich soil. 
Mrs. Scott Elliott’s Long-Spurred — 
Extremely large flowers, wide range 
pastel colors. Pkt. 20c. 
ARCTOTIS (Blue-eyed African Daisy) 
(a)—Culture I. Cover %-in. Ht. 242-ft. 
Midsummer to frost. Prefers sun. 
Grandis — Pure white blooms, bluish 
center with gold band. 
ARMERIA (Thrift) (hp) — Rock- 
garden or edging plant of bright rose 
or rose and white. Clustered flowers. 
Pkt. 15c. 
ASTER (a) 
Culture I. Cover Y-in. Ht. various. 
Need rich soil, good sun. 
American Branching — Most popular. 
314 to 4-in. double blooms. Branching. 
Plants 2 to 3-ft. Long stems. All colors. 
California Giant Improved — 5-in. 
double flowers, with long curled pet- 
als; stems 1% to 2-ft. long. Branching 2 
to 3-ft. plants. All colors. Pkt. 15c. 
Giant Crego (Wilt-resistant)—Flow- 
ers 4 to 5-in. double, with ribbon-like 
petals curled and twisted. Vigorous, 
branching 2-ft. plants. Long stems. All 
colors. Pkt. 15c. 
Giant Crego Navy Blue — 1943 All- 
America. Large 4-in. long petaled dou- 
ble flowers, deep purple blue, almost 
blackish blue. True, i niform, 12 to 20- 
in. branching plants. Pkt. 25c. 
Queen of the Market (Wilt-resistant) 
—First to bloom. Nearly round, double, 
3-in. flowers, long stems. Plants 18-in., 
spreading. All colors. 
BABY’S BREATH—See Gypsophila. | 
BACHELOR’S BUTTON (a) 
(Centaurea or Cornflower) 
Culture IV. Cover Y-in. 
Blue Boy — Very fine, fully double. 
Blue. Pkt. 15c. 
Jubilee Gem—All-America 1937. Com- 
pact 1-ft. plants, completely covered 
with large, double, deep blue flowers. 
Pkt. 15c. 
Pinkie—Double, deep pink. Pkt. 15c. 
Red Boy—Deep glowing red. Pkt. 15c. 
White—Glistening snow-white. 
Mixed— 
American Branching 
CENTAUREA 
TER 
as Jubilee Gem 
BALLOON VINE (Love -in-a- Puff) 
(a)—Culture III. Cover %2-in. Ht. 8 to 
10-ft. Prefers warm location. Rapid- 
growing climber with white flowers, 
succeeded by small, balloon-like seed- 
pods. 
BALSAM (Lady-Slipper) (a) @ — 
Culture II. Cover ¥-in. Ht. 2-ft. Dou- 
ble, camellia-like flowers. Wants par- 
tial shade, plenty of moisture. Sow late. 
BLUE LACE FLOWER (Didiscus) (a) 
Culture I. Cover seeds \%-in. Ht. 2-ft. 
Blooms midsummer. Clusters of laven- 
der-blue 214-in. flowers, like tiny para- 
sols. 
BURNING BUSH or FIRE BUSH— 
See Kochia. 
CALENDULA (a) 
(Pot Marigold) 
Culture II. Cover ¥%4-in. Ht. 18 to 20-in. 
Midsummer to frost. Grows anywhere. 
Stands drought and heat. Transplant to 
12 to 16-in. apart. 
Campfire Improved — Double 4-in. 
flowers, deep orange. Heavy stems. Pkt. 
15c. 
Orange King—Extra fine, deep orange, 
dark center. 
Orange Shaggy — All-America 1935. 
Deep orange, lighter centers; Chrysan- 
themum-like blooms. 
Mixed— 
CALLIOPSIS (a) 
(Tickseed) 
Culture IV. Cover %-in. Ht. various. 
Blooms all summer. Bright varied com- 
binations of color. 
Golden Crown—All-America 1938. Im- 
proved rich yellow, maroon center. 
Pkt. 15c. 
Tall, Mixed — Finest large and small- 
flowered varieties. 
CAMPANULA (Canterbury Bells) (a) 
—Culture I. Cover %-in. Ht. 1% ft. 
Blooms 5 to 6 months after seeding. 
Bushy plants, bell-shaped flowers; 
white, pink, blue and lilac. 
Single—All colors. 
Single and Double Mixed—Fine for 
late summer borders. 
CANDYTUFT (Iberis) (a) — AN- 
NUALS: Culture III. Cover %4-in. Ht. 6 
to 12-in. Blooms in 8 weeks. Blooms all 
season if not allowed to seed. Will grow 
in dry, sandy soil. 
All Flower Seeds 
10c PER PACKET 
except where otherwise noted 

