Hardy Garnations 
Hardy Carnations have a delightful, spicy fragrance. They 
are ideal for cutting as well as being excellent plants for beds,. 
borders, rock gardens or pots. Where light and heat conditions 
are satisfactory, they may even be cut back, lifted, and potted up 
for indoor flowering. We offer improved varieties which will flower 
this year if planted early. The tops should be cut soon after the 
plants are through blooming. Four named varieties are Grenadin 
type, growing 20 inches tall. 
King of the Blacks—Darkest red of them all, very fine. 
Triumph—Rose. 

Golden Sun—FEarly flowering, very double, large clear yellow flowers. 
White—Pure white, double flowers, very fragrant, 
Riviera Giants—A mixture of varied and unusual colors of immense double flowers. 
In addition to the single colors in shades of cream, salmon, orange-buff, smoky, 
lavender and cherry, many plants will produce striped or speckled flowers. 
Grows 2 feet tall. 
20¢ each; 12 for $2.00 

Single Sweet William 
(Dianthus Barbatus) 
Wonderfully showy and free-flowering bedding plants, especially colorful in June. 
They succeed best in fully exposed locations, and are very desirable for mass plantings. 
Grows from 18 to 24 inches tall, 
Blood Red—A very deep red. 
Special Giant White—Enormous trusses of white flowers. 
Homeland—Dark red with a large white center. 
Nigrescens—Very dark, almost black flowers with dark green foliage. 
Newport Pink—Salmon pink. 
20¢ each; 12 for $2.00 

Viola 
These lovely little plants produce smaller flowers than the 
Pansy. They bloom more freely, and over a longer period, and are 
really a better bedding plant than the Pansy. The Viola will be 
in full bloom all summer long if it is kept watered and all the old 
blooms are picked off. We have obtained a special mixture of 
Violas, which contain the bright shades of red, yellow, blue and 
apricot, combined with many shades which are blotched. They 
are perfectly hardy in this area. 
15¢ each; 2 for 25¢; 25 for $2.50 


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