
WALLFLOWER, A | | Sie 
Produces spikes of beautiful, exceedingly 
fragrant flowers. Colors yellow, red, orange 
and brown. Half hardy perennials. Sow seeds 
in open and transplant to permanent location 
late in summer. Should bloom second season. 
Height, 1 to 1% feet. 
Mixed, Single. Large flowering. 
Finest Tall Double Mixed. Branching. 
SIBERIAN WALLFLOWER, P 
Allioni. This unusual little plant deserves a: 
place in your rock garden or low border. Up- 
right spikes bear numerous four-petaled flow- 
ers of dazzling rich orange. Though a hardy 
biennial, it flowers the first season from seed 
and when established will bloom throughout 
the summer. 
Allinoni Golden Bedder (New). Companion to 
the above, orange. Good size flowers. Golden 
yellow, on plant 12 inches in height. Blooms 
first year from seed. 
Fine Double Mixed. Long spikes closely set 
with large, double, sweet-scented flowers in 
bright oriental red and yellow colors. Nice cut 
flowers. May. 1% to 2 feet. 
WILD CUCUMBER VINE, A 
Lobata. A very quick growing vine, though the 
seed is somewhat slow to germinate. Excellent Dahlia Flowered 
for covering trellises, old trees, fences, etc. 
Beautiful bright green foliage and honey- 
scented white flowers during summer. 
ZINNIAS, AF 
One of the most showy and satisfactory of our hardy an- 
nuals for beds, mixed borders and for cutting purposes. Easy 
to grow in any good garden soil. They commence fiowering 
early in the summer and continue until frost. 
SPECIAL! 
PICK ANY FOUR DAHLIA FLOWERED ZINNIAS 
25e 

Note our complete list of all the worthwhile varieties. 
DWARF SORTS 
For a beautiful display of color and for continuous blooms. 
Dwarf Zinnias are unexcelled. They are real cut flowers and 
will last well in the house. Try some. 
Tom Thumb. These tiny flowered Zinnias have a charm the 
larger ones can never attain, and make a brilliant display. 
They come in attractive color combinations, red tipped gold, 
salmon and gold, primrose yellow with a hundred unusual 
intermediate shades. All colors mixed. 
HAAGEANA DOUBLE (Mexican Hybrids). The small flow- 
ered Mexican Zinnias have a charm all their own. The smaller 
flowers lend themselves to bedding and make a brilliant dis- 
play and yet have stems long enough to make fine bouquets 
for small vases and bowls. The mixture contains many attrac- 
tive colors and color combinations. Finest Mixed. 
DOUBLE LILLIPUT. 12 inches. A charming dwarf which is 
excellent for low borders or edgings. The plants are of tidy 
habit and produce a bounteous supply of very double pompon 
flowers about 1% inches across. The colors are bright and 
well varied. : 
Mixed Colors. Pastels Mixed. 
SCABIOUS FLOWERED. Among the oddest and most attrac- 
tive Zinnia forms, bearing a remarkable resemblance to the 
annual Scabiosa. The plants are extremely free flowering, 2 to 
2% feet high, giving a wealth of bloom throughout the sum- 
mer. While the color range includes all popular shades, it is 
particularly rich in shades of crimson, scarlet, orange, yellow 
and pink. Mixed Colors. 
CROWN 0’ GOLD. Desert Gold is an aristrocrat among Zin- 
nias. The flowers are large, double and well formed, on good 
cutting stems, generously produced on plants which reach a 
height of 2144 to 3 feet. It is a good garden variety but its 
main claim to individuality and distinction is the delightful 
color combination of the flowers. The variety comprises the 
light and deep shades of gold while each petal is overlaid at 
the base with a deeper golden yellow. Pastel Shades. 
HOWARD’S GIANT CRESTED ZINNIA. Its colors are 
charmingly bright and fresh, and contain almost all known 
colors and shades of color to be found in this most popular of 
annual plants. Magnificent shades of orange, orange scarlet, 
yellow, rose, maize and crimson predominate. The blossoms 
average from 4 to 5 inches in diameter, with a full rounded 
cushiony center surrounded by broad guard petals after the 
style of a Pyrethrum Roseum. As a cut flower, or as an an- 
nual for garden ornamentation. they are without a peer. 
Pkt. 15e. 


Linearis Haa geana Lilliput ‘ 
we oe 
Pumila Picotee Delight 
Double Giant 
California Giant 
ZINNIAS 
TALLER SORTS 
DOUBLE DAHLIA FLOWERED. 2% feet. Enormous double 
flowers are produced by robust branching plants. The flowers 
usually have slightly hollowed centers ringed with small tubu- 
lar florets. The petals are quite loosely placed and tend to curl 
at the edges, giving the blossoms a crisp, fresh appearance. 
Canary Bird. Rich canary yellow. 
Crimson Monarch. Deep cr-:mson, large flowers. 
Dream. Deep rosy laven¢er. 
Eldorado. Salmon apricot. 
Exquisite. Light rose, deep rose center. 
IWumination. Deep rose. 
Oriole. Orange and gold bicolor. 
Polar Bear. White. 
Will Rogers. Loveliest and most brilliant scarlet red. 
Mixed. : : 
Zinnia Linearis 
The most unusual and interesting of the newer Zinnias is 
the little dwarf variety, Linearis. The flowers, which are 
single, are a lovely shade of golden orange, with a delicate 
lemon yellow stripe through each petal, while the center is 
dark brown in the young flowers, turning golden orange as 
the pollen develops. It is extremely early blooming, com- 
mencing to flower when the plants are about 6 inches tall. 
Fantasy 
The most distinctive new Zinnia. As different from the 
ordinary formal Zinnia as one could imagine, the delicate, 
lacy petaled flowers lend an air of friendly informality to 
the garden or flower arrangement. The rounded, medium-sized 
shaggy flowers are borne profusely on 2% to 3-foot plants, in 
a wide and varied color range which includes the brightest 
shades of red, yellow and orange, as well as the popular pastel 
pinks and cream. 
Finest Mixed. 
Stardust. Yellow. 
Fantasy Wildfire. 
CALIFORNIA GIANT. Our special strain of this favorite 
produces flowers of colossal size, specimens measuring from 
5 to 6 inches across being not unusual. The plants are of 
extremely robust habit, attaining a height of about 3 feet, 
and should be placed 18 to 24 inches apart to allow for full 
development. They bear numerous semi-globular, mostly very 
double flowers all of the largest size, making them of great 
value in large beds, borders, etc. Grown under favorable con- 
ditions they remain in bloom from early summer to late au 
tumn. Their long stems make them ideal for cutting. 
Crimson Queen. Rich crimson, 
Deep Purple. 
Daffodil. Canary yellow. 
Grenadier. Bright red. 
Miss Willmott. Soft pink. 
Orange King. Orange scarlet. 
Brightness. Bright pink. 
Enchantress. Light, deep rose center. 
Lavender Queen. 
Purity. Best white. 
Salmon Queen. 
Violet Queen. 
Mixed Colors. 

CONSULT US FOR THE BEST VARIETIES OF VEGETABLES TO PLANT FOR ASSURED SUCCESS 3] 
