NICOTIANA « For Plants see page 40 
Flowering Tobacco. A very desirable, easily grown annual, making wonderful showy displays from 
June until frost. Sown outdoors in May and thinned to stand 9 inches apart, it thrives in rich soil 
and full sun. The flowers open toward evening, when they scent the air with delightful perfume. 
Affinis, White. : : ; : Pkt. 10c; Moz. 35c 
Fragrant white flowers, not unlike a Petunia, but with a longer tube and held in clusters on 21% to 3-foot plants. 
Crimson Bedder. Pkt. 15c; Woz. 45e; Voz. 80: 
This is a dwarf variety with clusters of bright pale crimson flowers on large-leaved plants, 15 iches heh fas 
Daylight Sensation Mixed. Pkt. 15c; j50z. 45c 
This new strain is the very finest development in Nicotiana. The 214-foot plants bear a wealth of 
flowers in a brilliant color range including scarlet, crimson, rose, coral, mahogany, violet, yellow, lilac 
and white. The large blooms, unlike the older strains, remain open during the daytime. 
FLOWER GARDEN MIXTURE. A mixture of annuals for both borders and cut-flowers. Oz. 60c. 
NIEREMBERGIA « For Plants see page 40 
Cup Flower. Without exception this will outbloom any other flower if properly grown. Fine for pot- 
culture when started in early January, or for bedding plants if started in February. 
Purple Robe. Pkt. 25c; 1 hee oz. 70c; aoz. $1.35 
All-America Winner. A fine deep violet-purple resembling Hippomanica but the color does not fade 
even in hot summer. The 6-inch plants, 10 inches across, bloom very freely beginning 15 weeks from 
seed including the 3-week germinating period. Much admired as edging or rock-garden plants. 
NIGELLA 
Love-in-a-Mist. A fine annual for bedding and borders, but particularly as a cut-flower. It blooms 
from May to September and the seed may be sown outdoors in April. 
Miss Jekyll. k ; AS ot ; Pkt. 15c; Moz. 45c 
Bushy plants, 114 feet high, with slender, mist-like foliage and clear cornflower-blue flowers on long stems. 
PANSY « For Plants see page 45 
These are strictly biennials, but as they flower easily the first season from seed they are often started 
indoors in February or March to bloom outdoors from July on. Most plants are grown from seed sown 
in frames during July and August, transplanted later and wintered over with protection, to give full- 
flowering plants by the following May. If Pansy seed is sown in the garden bed in May, some beautiful 
flowers are produced on the plants by fall of the same year. They like a rich, loamy soil and full sun. 
Engelmann’s Giant. : (Originator’s Seed) Pkt. 50c; yy0z. $1.45; 14oz. $2.70; Moz. $5 
This strain Is very vigorous growing, compact, and early flowering. It produces very huge, well-formed 
flowers in a great variety of shades, both dark and light, all of the blotched type. 
Forbes Big Beauties. Pkt. 35c; skoz. 95c; oz. $1.80; Moz. $3.25 
These are enormous flowers, often 4 inches across, with perfectly round, overlapping petals, on strong 
stalks, above stocky, compact plants of great vigor. The wonderful array of colors includes bronze, 
silver, gold and copper—wine-red, pink, salmon, silver-gray, brown, Indian red, steel blue, dark blue, 
and a good percentage of rich yellow. The blooms are beautifully blotched, mottled and bordered. 
Super Swiss Giants, Mixed Pkt. 35c; #s0z. $1.10; Moz. $1.95; oz. $3.75 
This is a magnificent blend and far surpasses m quality and range of color any other Swiss Giant 
mixture. The plants are more compact and most of the flowers are beautifully frilled. They are of 
perfect form, with thick, velvety, rounded petals in a color-range beyond belief, many 5-blotched. 
Phlox drummondi 
Portulaca 
Salvia (red) 
Star of Texas 
Tahoka Daisy 
Zinnia 
Kochia 
Larkspur 
Marvel of Peru 
Morning-Glory, Dwarf 
Morning-Glory, Tall 
Nasturtium 
Amaranthus 
Calliopsis 
Centaurea cyanus 
Dimorphotheca 
Euphorbia 
Helianthus 
ANNUALS 
FOR HOT 
DRY SOILS 
Pansy, 
Super Swiss 
Giants 
Nierembergia, 
] Purple Robe 
Nigella’ 
Miss Jekyll 
Nicotiana, 
Daylight 
Sensation, |, 
ixed 
