



Canton 2, Ohio 
Flower Seed Novelties 



Ipomea, Blue Star 
Beautiful New Petunias 
1014 FIRE CHIEF—NEW RED PETUNIA 
All-America Gold Medal for 1950 
Undoubtedly the best new flower variety intro- 
duced for many years. Imagine the effect of a really 
red Petunia in big beds or long borders or even in 
a group of a few plants. It’s bright, it’s colorful and 
it stays in full flower all summer and early fall. 
Good compact plants with flowers of an excel- 
lent bedding size. Pkt. 25c, 1/4 oz. $1.00. 
1015 Silver Medal Salmon 
Winner of a Silver Medal in All-America trials. 
Experts who judged the 1948 trials of this Petunia 
call it the richest and purest salmon pink ever intro- 
duced. A good Petunia of that shade has been 
lacking, now you can have it. Dwarf compact plants 
covered with medium sized blooms. Blooms early 
and continues all summer. Pkt. 50c. 
1016 Snowball Improved. The finest white bedding 
Petunia with glistening pure white, well rounded 
flowers on dwarf plants that retain their compact 
growth throughout the summer. 
Pkt. 20c, 1/42 oz. 60c, 146 oz. $1.00. 
988 Dwarf Ruffled Garden Giants. The big ruffled 
blooms do not quite match the size of the Giants 
of California, but they are close to it and are so 
much freer blooming that they are far superior 
for outdoor bedding. Gorgeous colors in mixture 
only, richly throated and veined. 
Pkt. 25c, Large Trade Pkt. $1.25. 
440 Cosmos, Radiance 
1947 Silver Medal Winner. An entirely new 
color for Cosmos, deep rose with a well-defined 
zone of crimson at the base of the petals. It belongs 
to the early flowering Cosmos and is free blooming 
throughout a long season. 
Pkt. 10c, 146 oz. 25c, 4% oz. 45c. 
25 

PS 
Petunia, Silver Medal 
NEW FLOWERS FOR YOUR GARDENS 
63 Giant Tetra ‘‘Snaps”’ 
The most satisfactory Snapdragon or Antirrhinum 
for outdoor growing because of the strong, vigor- 
ous plants and the large florets and flower spikes. 
The mixed colors cover the whole range of “Snap” 
shades. Pkt. 20c, 146 oz. 75c. 
907 Morning Glory (lpomea) Blue Star 
Another All-America Award Winner for 1949. 
It is a clear sky blue with deeper color mid-ribs, 
forming a distinct blue star. It is a vigorous vine and 
very free flowering. A few plants climbing on the 
garage or over a fence will be a grand sight. 
Pkt. 15c, ¥% oz. 40c, 14 oz. 70c. 
877 Marigold, Eldorado 
This clear canary yellow is the shade so many 
want these days. There is no prettier combination 
than this light yellow planted with blues, such as 
blue Petunias or Ageratum. Dwarf plants 10 to 12 
inches high with long blooming season, starting 
early. Pkt. 15¢, ¥% oz. 50c. 
1171 Salvia—St. John’s Fire 
Salvia is coming very strongly back into popu- 
larity. In many locations the dwarf type is much pre- 
ferred. St. John’s Fire is only a foot tall, real bushy 
and the earliest Salvia to display its fiery red bloom. 
Pkt. 25c, 4% oz. $1.50. 
Sweet Peas, Cuthbertson 
One of the most valuable flower introductions of 
many years, as with this strain it is much easier for 
the home gardener to grow good Sweet Peas and 
to have them well into the summer when the older 
types fade out. Grand large, sweet scented flowers 
on long stems. 
1260 Cuthbertson Mixed. Pkt. 10c, oz. 35c. 
