
The Ali-America Medal-Winning Morning Glory, 
Blue Star 
Giant Flowers Very Early in the Summer 
Myosotis Forget-Me-Not 
A splendid half-hardy perennial, which 
should be treated as an annual, making very 
lovely beds and borders and delightful spots of 
color in the rock garden. Sow the seed in the 
spring for summer bloom and in the fall, pro- 
tecting during the winter, for early spring 
flowers. The Alpestris varieties should be treated 
as annuals and prefer to grow in the sun. 
Palustris does far better in moist, shady places. 
Sutton’s Royal Biue (Alpestris). Compact 
plants 8 inches tall covered in the spring with 
rich, deep blue flowers. Pkgilisc 
Plants similar to above but 
Alpestris Rose. 
Pkg. 15¢ 
with rose-pink flowers. 
Palustris Semperflorens. Dwarf plants,’ 8 
inches tall, covered with iarge, rich blue flowers 
with a yellow eye from early spring until fall. 
Splendid for borders in moist, shady places 
along walks, drives, or around pools. Hardy here 
in the North but should be renewed often. 
Pkg. 15c; large pkg. 50c 
Nierembergia 
Purple Robe. Bronze Medal, All-America 
Selection, 1942. A charming annual blooming 
15 weeks after seed is sown. Grows about 8 
inches high and produces an abundance of 
showy, small, cup-shaped blooms of clear deep 
violet-purple shades. This plant is neat, com- 
pact, extremely free flowering, with a spread 
of some 10 to 12 inches. Makes a grand bor- 
der and edging subject. 
Pkg. 25c; large pkg. 75c 
Purple Robe Nierembergia—Makes a Grand Border and Edging Plant 

MORNING GLORIES 
Here is a group of the latest in Morning Glories—flowers 
are of magnificent size, yet still dainty and graceful. 
Scarlett O’Hara. Entirely different from any 
other Morning Glory. The large carnelian-red 
flowers, about 3¥2 in. across, appear on the 
vine early in the season, about 65 days after 
seed is sown, and remain until frost. Blossoms 
stay open all day long. The vine makes an 
abundance of clean, rich dark green foliage. 
The foliage is ‘halberd’ shaped rather than 
the heart shaped leaves of most Morning 
Glories. Pkg. 15c (will make a 15-ft. row); 
Y4 oz. 50c (for a 60-ft. row). 
Blue Star. All-America Winner. A new color 
in Giant Morning Glories, a distinct shade of 
clear sky-blue accentuated by the fine deeper 
blue midribs to form an attractive star; a truly 
outstanding and most attractive shade. The 
flowers are of great size, being larger and 
earlier than the ever-popular Heavenly Blue, 
they average from 4 to 414 inches in diameter 
and are borne in great profusion. One of the 
most notable characteristics of this Morning 
Glory is the fact that the flowers remain open 
well into the afternoon on cloudy days. 
Pkg. 15c (will make a 15-ft. row); 14 oz. 50c 
Moonflower. Night blooming. Giant white. 
Covered with large white flowers every evening 
and cloudy day from July until frost. Quick 
growing; climbs 15 ft. and more high, with 
luxuriant foliage which provides splendid shade. 
Pkoisc4roz. 35c 

SURPRISE GARDEN 
FLOWER SEED 
Here we offer a mixture of many easy 
growing annual flowers that can be sown 
broadcast, and with practically no care at 
all will produce a bright effect. Especially 
adapted for sowing in fence corners or along 
the fence, for borders, or any place that 
can have but little care and needs brighten- 
ing up. Scattered broadcast along a path- 
way or drive, the flowers give color to dull 
places. 
Eq: pkgs lOcoz7 25¢%" Van Ibe af oG ib. 2.50) 



JUSTA 
SIMPLE 
TWIST OF 
THE WRIST 
AND THE 
PLANT IS TIED 


==> {lI 
TWIST-EMS. See page 60. 
[40] 
Heavenly Blue, Hart & Vick’s Early-Flow- 
ering Strain. This beautiful blue Morning 
Glory has attracted much attention and has 
been greatly admired by many people. The 
vines make a growth of 15 feet or more, are 
covered with splendid light green foliage, and 
show, from July until frost, masses of pure 
sky-blue flowers delicately shading to white 
in the center. Pkg. 15c (will make a 15-ft. row); 
Y4 oz. 35c¢ (for a 60-ft. row); oz. 95c 
Pearly Gates. This annual climbing vine won 
the Silver Medal of the All-America Selection 
in 1942. The vine grows rapidly to a height 
of 15 ft. or more and bears fair quantities of 
lustrous white trumpet shaped flowers with 
creamy shadings in the throat. The flowers 
are large, about 414 inches in diameter and 
in bloom from July to frost. 
Pkg. 15c (will make a 10-ft. row); V4 oz. 50¢ 
Giant Flowering Mixed. Spotted, marbled 
and striped, snow-white to black-purple. Be- 
yond question, the largest and brightest flow- 
ering of the class. Of the easiest culture, and 
can be sown in the open ground in a sunny 
position when the weather has become warm 
and settled. They soon cover a large area. 
The flowers are of gigantic size, and their col- 
orings beautiful beyond description. The self 
or solid colors range from snow-white to black- 
purple, with all the possible intermediate 
shades. There are also an endless number hav- 
ing flowers spotted, marbled, striped, flaked. 
splashed, etc. Pkg. 10c; oz. 35c 
Flag Mixture of Morning Glories. 
Red, white and blue—a _ patriotic 
combination of giant flowering Morn- 
ing Glories. 
Give them a prominent 
place in your garden this season. 
Pkg. 15c; large pkg. (enough seed to 
make vines to cover a 30-foot fence 
or trellis) 35c. 

Nemophila 
Baby Blue Eyes 
Insignis. An easily grown, very satisfactory 
early flowering annual bearing bright blue 
flowers on sturdy plants 6 to 8 inches high. 
Splendid in the rock garden, rock wail and for 
edging. Pkg. 10c; Y% oz. 30c 
Triumph Hybrids. Low growing, 7-inch plants 
for beds and borders, bearing, from midsummer 
until frost, cream, orange, yellow, crimson and 
orange, miniature, orchid-like flowers tipped 
with other colors. To get them into bloom in 
mid-summer start the seed indoors in early 
March and put the plants out in the garden 
when danger of frost is past. 
Pkg. 15c; large pkg. 50c 
Sutton’s Royal Blue Forget-Me-Not 

