Nicotiana 
FLOWERING TOBACCO, a— Finest 
mixed. All shades. Pkt. 10c. 
Nigella (Love-in-a-mist) 
MISS JEKYLL, a—Splendid cut vari- 
ety; bright blue flowers. Free flowering. 
Pkt. 10c. 
Pansies 
Perennial. Sow early inside; outside 
in March; August for spring plants. 
‘Prices: Unless noted: Pkt. 25c. 
BUTTERFLY HYBRIDS—New; a rain- 
bow collection, abundantly ruffled, 
frilled, fluted, and marked with sun rays 
and blotches of butterfly sheen metallic 
jewel tones. Pkt. 100 seeds 50c. 
ROGGLI’S GIANTS — An excellent 
range of color. Giant flowers on long 
sturdy stems. Compact plant. 
CORONATION GOLD — Largest and 
best pure yellow. 
GRAND DUKE MICHEAL — Largest 
all-white. 
GOLDEN GATE—Golden yellow with 
dark blotch. 
IMPROVED SEA BLUE—Best blue. 
JUMBO MADAM STEELE—Giant vel- 
vety purple. 
MLLE. IRENE — Henna red type, new 
to pansies. 
*GILL’S MASTER MIXED—tThis fine 
mixture includes all the giant type 
pansies. 
*SWISS GIANTS — Wonderful shades. 
Massive flowers on strong stems. Con- 
tains many red and bronze shades. 
*GILL’S OREGON GIANTS—A splen- 
did mixture of giant flowers in a good 
range of colors. Pkt. 15c. 
Impatiens 
SULTANI (often called Busy Bee or 
Busy Lizzy) —Long a favorite house 
plant, it is easily raised from seed. It has 
waxy bright-rose colored flowers. Also 
makes an excellent border plant, form- 
ing a good bushy growth about 15” high 
and abundance of bloom. Pkt. 25c. 
Passifioria Eudles 
(Passion Flower) 
The annual flowers are of unusual 
structure. May be planted in pots or 
out in a border. They do well in fibrous 
loam with leafmold, and appreciate liquid 
manure when growth is active. Pkt. 25c. 
Pentstemon 
SENSATION, p—Gloxinia-like flowers 
on graceful 2’ spikes. A wide range of 
bright colors. Not hardy, and should be 
covered in winter. Pkt. 15c. 

Defiance Petunia—Page 44 
Petunias (Annual) 
COLOSSAL SHADES OF ROSE—Sil- 
ver medal A.A.S. 1946. Giant all double 
flowers of American origin and the larg- 
est yet produced. The beautiful, intensely 
double blooms are often 5 inches across, 
appearing in rich rose shades, salmon- 
pink through rosy-pink to deep rosy- 
mauve. Vigorous plants 20 to 24 inches 
tall and bearing profusely over a long 
season. Pkt. 100 seeds $1.00. 
BRIGHT EYES—Bronze medal, A.A.S. 
1946. A more compact type of Rosy Morn. 
Flowers of clear light rose-pink with 
white throat, carried well above the 
foliage. Uniform color and: habit. 10-in. 
Pkt. 25c. 
PEACH RED—Honorable mention, A. 
A.S. 1946. Full-bodied uniform pink, free 
from fading and vivid rich peach red. 
Shapely plants 12 inches tall and with a 
spread of 18 to 24 inches. Desirable for 
beds and borders. Pkt. 25c. 
CHEERFUL — A.A.S. ’44. New dwarf 
bedding petunias. Flowers grow 2% in. 
and more across. Color varying, accord- 
ing to age, from clear salmon-pink to 
softer, lighter shades of salmon. Plants 
are of a new habit of growth, being low, 
spreading close to ground, and later 
forming a dwarf mound 10 in. high and 
as much as 2 ft. across; ideal for bedding 
and wide borders. Lovely for cutting. 
Pkt. 25c. 
GLAMOUR—A.A.S. ’42. Luscious sal- 
mon rose, delicately veined brown in 
the creamy shallow throat. Plants 1%’ 
tall KiecoCe 
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