
Shasta Daisy 
Shasta Daisies 
Chrysanthemums Leucanthemum, are of the 
Shasta Daisy type, so wonderful for garden dis- 
play or cut-flowers. 
2738 BURBANK’S SHASTA DAISY ALASKA. 
Finest hardy daisy, pure white, 24% to 3 inches 
phen July and August. 214 ft. Pkt. 1Oe; 1% oz. 
30c. 
2744 DOUBLE SHASTA DAISY. New and un- 
usual, large percentage of doubles, like Asters. 
Pkt. 30c. 
2748 MAWII. New pink Shasta Daisy. 1% to 2 
inches across. Plants 1 foot. Rare. NO SEED. 
2739 MRS. C. LOWTHIAN BELL. Largest 
flowered, June to October. 2 ft. NO SEED. 


Sidalcea 
Sidalcea 
Spikes 21 to 3 feet in height, densely covered from 
July to September with pretty single rosy-pink 
flowers. Each about an inch across. 
3328S HYBRIDS. Many shades. Pkt. 10c. 

A Few Heads of Templin-Bradley’s 
Giant Sweet William 
Sweet William 
3361 SINGLE GIANT MIXED. Fine mixture of 
Margined and Auricula varieties and brightest 
colors and shades not present in other mixtures. 
Pkt. 10c; '4 oz. 25c. : 

Viola, Hardy 
Adorable little Pan- 
sy-like faces. Beauti- 
ful colors. 




Sweet Peas, Hardy 
Sweet Peas, Hardy 
Lathyrus Latifolius. For covering old stumps, 
fences, etc. Perfectly hardy, increasing in beauty 
each year. June to August. 
3016 HARDY SWEET PEAS MIXED. Pkt. 10c: 
4 oz. 35e. 

Tritomas 
Red Hot Poker, Flame Flower or Torch Lily. 
Really Perennials, but roots tender, and should 
be taken up and stored like Dahlias. 
3407 ELEGENS MULTICOLOR. Early flowering 
Hybrids in a rich variety of shades flaming orange, 
yellow and scarlet. Pkt. 10c. 
3408 PFITZER’S HYBRIDS. Great waxy flowers 
of rich orange-scarlet, making a splash of vivid 
color. Pkt. Lde. 
——$—$——— 

Trollius, Globe Flower 
Trollius 
Globe Flower or Golden Ball. Beautiful gold and 
yellow Perennials. 18 inches tall, flowers large, 
double, globe-shaped, 114 inches across. Bloom 
in May and June, sometimes a second crop is 
produced in the fall. Seed sometimes not starting 
until the year following the sowing. 
3403 LEDERBOURI. Deep orange. 2 ft. Pkt. L5e. 
a Se ee ae a ee ee 
Violas, Hardy 
Viola Cornuta, Hardy Tufted Pansies combine 
the free blooming habits of Pansies with the 
hardy character of Vioiets. Will not run out like 
the Pansy nor are the flowers as large, but pro- 
duced in profusion during entire season. 
3457 ARKWRIGHT’S RUBY. Bright ruby-¢rimson 
with terra cotta shadings. Pkt. Ld5e. 
3448 VIOLA CORNUTA MIXED. All available 
colors in the large flowering varieties. Pkt. 10¢; 
lg oz. 45e. 
$452-A. CHANTREYLAND. Among the delightful 
Viola Cornutas, Chantreyland takes top place. 
Its beautiful, pure apricot color, fine flower form, 
abundance of bloom and neat plant habit, all 
help to make Chantreyland almost the perfect 
Viola, and it comes exceptionally true from seed. 
Pkt. 15e. 

Wallflowers 
Cheiranthus. Delightfully fragrant. Bloom in 
spring. Beautiful flowers in many colors. Protect 
during winter. 
3462 TALL 
Pkt. 15¢e. 
2734 ALLIONI, Siberian Wallflower. R.G. 
Abundance of dazzling orange flowers. June to 
July. Excellent for Rock Gardens. 1 ft. high. 
Pkt. 10c. 
DOUBLE BRANCHING MIXED. 
Perennial Seeds 49 
Grand Perennial Mixtures 
If you want just ‘‘lots of flowers” in Perennials, 
and are not fussy about keeping the varieties 
separate, here are two dandy Mixtures that will 
give you quantities of many, many different 
kinds at very low cost. 
3471 TALL SORTS. Most desirable varieties for 
gine Pais os for cut-flowers. Most all grow 
2 to 3 feet tall. Very interesting to grow. PKt. 
LOe: 4 oz. 35e; Oz. $1.00. 5 Fe 
3472 FOR ROCK GARDENS. This mixture in- 
cludes the varieties that are best for Rock Garden 
use. All semi-dwarf and low growing and will 
thrive well in the rockery. Pkt. 20c; % oz. 25c. 
HOW TO GROW 
PERENNIALS 
FROM SUMMER SOWING OF SEED 
Nearly all of this class of plants may be as 
successfully propagated by late summer sow- 
ing (July or August) as by spring sowing and 
in many cases more satisfactory results ob- 
tained. Very few realize how easily this may 
be done. 
For this purpose select a somewhat pro- 
tected spot in the garden. Improve the soil 
as much as possible. A cold frame, even 
though small is a great advantage, and can 
very easily be provided. All that is necessary 
is a frame constructed of boards to the height 
of 10 to 12 inches, of whatever size desired. 
Over this, in case of bad weather or hot sun, 
muslin may be stretched or slatted frames 
made from lath may be used. Within this 
frame the soil should be raised two or three 
inches above the outside level to insure good 
drainage, and worked into a well prepared 
seed bed. 
It is well, if the soil is rather heavy to add 
whatever quantity of sand and fine humus, 
such as Peat Moss, as it may require to pro- 
duce a mellow, friable soil that will remain‘ 
fine and loose. Peat Moss is especially bene- 
ficial to young seedlings. 
In this well prepared seed bed, sow the seed 
preferably in rows three or four inches apart. 
One thing that will be the most helpful to 
success is the proper depth of planting. This 
must be regulated by the size and nature of 
the seed. Very fine seed should barely be 
covered with sand, in fact, simply pressing 
the seed into the soil with the palm of the 
hand and keeping it covered with burlap or 
newspaper until it shows growth is sufficient. 
Larger seeds should be covered two or three 
times their diameter. Watering should be 
done very carefully with as fine a spray as 
possible. Keep the soil uniformly moist’ but 
not wet, and do not allow it to become dry at 
any time. After sowing, the seed bed should be 
shaded during the day until the seedlings are 
well started when they may be gradually 
accustomed to the sunlight. It is well to pro- 
tect the seed bed during the night or any 
absence from home, as rains do much damage 
to newly sown seed beds or to small seedlings. 
As soon as the seedlings become large 
enough to handle, or when showing their third 
and fourth leaves, they should be transplanted 
to a place where they may have plenty of 
space to develop (4 or 5 inches apart is 
usually sufficient ) and in this bed they may 
be carried over their first winter, which is 
always their hardest. A covering of loose 
straw or leafy branches is excellent protection 
but avoid leaves alone or anything of like 
nature that will pack down and keep the air 
from the plants. Remove this covering in the 
spring gradually, just as soon as the weather 
has become mild and danger of severe freezing 
is past. Your plants will soon begin to show 
active growth and then they may be removed 
to their permanent places in the hardy border, 
in the rock garden, or wherever you may have 
prepared a place for them. 
THE TEMPLIN-BRADLEY CoO. 
5700 Detroit Ave. Cleveland 2, Ohio 
Seedmen 

The Templin-Bradley Co., Seeds and Bulbs, Cleveland 2, Ohio 
