CAMPBELL SEED STORE, PASADENA, CALIFORNIA 


Early Flowering Spencer Sweet Peas 
SHASTA DAISY, Chrysanthemum maximum. Per. Sun. 
Large white border and cutting flower; sow anytime. 
Germination period 10 to 14 days. 
Alaska, largest-flowered; 2% feet. 
May Queen, more 
% oz. 35c; Pkts. 10c. 
Double and Crested Mixed, new beautiful strain. with large 
ball-shaped double flowers or single, anemone-centered 
blooms. Large Pkt. 50c; small 25c. 
flowers, somewhat smaller; 2 feet. 

Gloxinia 

Sweet Peas 
SWEET PEAS, Lathyrus odoratus. Sun. 
Early Flowering Spencer is the best strain for California 
and the south, or for greenhouse use anywhere, blooming 
from December to June if planted in August or September; 
flowers are very large, wavy, 3 to 4 on long stems; sow 
August to March. Germination period 10 days. 
Outstanding Varieties of Recent Introduction. Pkt. 25c. 
Dawn, deep chamois pink. 
Fortyniner, glowing orange, frilled. 
Geranium, salmon cerise. 
Mariner, clear marine blue. 
Top Sergeant, deep blood red. 
Cuthbertson Strain, Mixed, heat-resistant, later blooming 
Leading Popular Varieties. Oz. 75c; %-oz. 40c; %4-oz. 30c: 
Pkts. 1lvc. 
Bacchus, Red-Purple. 
Bridesmaid, Silver Pink, 
Blue Danube, Clear Blue. 
Boon, Coral or Flame-Pink. 
Cinderella, Light Blue. 
Daphne, Salmon-and-Cream. 
Gardenia, Fragrant White. 
Mars, Rich Blood-Red. 
Memory, Orchid-Lavender. 
Oriental, deepest Cream. 
Othello, deepest Maroon. 
Shirley Temple, Rose-Pink. 
Top Hat, Blue-Purple. 
Tops, bright rose-pink, yielding 5 and 6 giant flowers per 
stem. ' 
Vulcan, Vivid Scarlet. 
Campbell’s Special Mixture of Named Early Spencers con- 
tains all the above varieties. Oz. 45¢c; %-oz. 25c; “%-oz. 15c. 
Spring-Flowering Spencers (new group, commencing to 
flower about April 1 and continuing into summer from late 
fall sowings. Have greater vigor and resistance to drought 
than any other Sweet Peas. An excellent strain for a second 
or follow-up crop to the winter-and-spring-flowering Early 
Spencers): ; 
Mid-Blue; Lavender; Mauve-Lilac; Rose-Pink; Salmon-Rose; 
and White. Pkts. 15c; 5 for 60c. 
Late Spencer Mixed (bloom by May). Oz. 35c; %-oz. 20c; 
Pkt. 15c. 
Dwarf Spencer, for bedding (bushy plants; 1 foot): Pkt. 15c. 
Bo-Peep, new early salmon pink. Pkt. 15c. 


Advanced Gardeners . ... 
Test your skill with these 
Known to be difficult to grow and flower from seed, the 
following plants will well repay your efforts in fine plants 
for pot culture. . 
GLOXINIA hybrida grandiflora. Per. Sinningia. 
Light to full shade. 
Rich, red, pink, blue, and white, huge velvety flowers best in 
pots in semi-shade; 1 foot; sow under glass anytime. Sow- 
ings made January to April will flower the same summer. 
Campbell’s Giant Mixture. Pkt. 50c. 
STREPTOCARPUS. Per. strep-toh-karp’-us. Light shade. 
Shades of blue, lavender, rose, and white trumpet shaped 
flowers on handsome pot plants in seven months from seed: 
sow November to March. lSarge-flowered Hybrids Mixed. 
Pkt. 50c. 
STRELITZIA. Per. stre-lit’-zia. Sun. ; 
The strikingly beautiful “Bird of Paradise’, raises crested, 
bird-like blooms of rich orange, yellow and gleaming deep 
blue above thick clumps of large, decorative leaves. The large 
seeds are slow to germinate, taking from 1 to 6 months. The 
plants grow 3 to 4 feet tall in large clumps which may be 
divided to give you many more. Blossoms seldom appear be- 
fore the fourth year. Seeds are 25c each, 5 for $1.00. 
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28 “DEPENDABLE SEEDS AND BULBS SINCE 1907” 
