Get Full Bloom a Whole Year Sooner 
Save from 25 to 50 Per Cent — with Fall Planting 
The plants listed in this folder are the very same ones we will be shipping next Spring 
(with the exception of the Peonies and Spring bulbs, which must be planted now). In your 
garden through the Fall and over the Winter they can be storing up energy, spreading out 
their roots, getting firmly established, ready to pay you extra dividends of bloom and fra- 
grance as a result. 
Summer and Fall are ideal for planting, too, because you can plan for your garden with 
it spread out before you in full growth. There’s no question of “remembering” what you 
need—you can actually see the holes that need filling or the pictures that need completing. 
and you'll be happy over combining them with Asclepias 
in your August garden. 
Pyrethrum is a chrysanthemum cousin, although limited in 
color-range ta the pinks, and crimsons. Best of all, they’re 
just as sturdy and nearly as good cut-flowers as the main 
branch of their family. 
Shasta Daisy. These give steady summer bloom of long- 
stemmed Marguerite-like flowers that are invaluable for 
cutting. 
Statice, though entirely different in flower-form, is as use- 
ful as Gypsophila in the way it makes charming combina- 
tions with the yellows and oranges of other flowers. 
Trollius.. Recently there have been developed some new, 
larger, and more strikingly colored types of this flower 
that always reminds one of a vivid giant buttercup. 
Gaillardia Grandiflora 
Monarda really belongs to the Mint family, but don’t turn 
it down for that reason. For its showy flowers, with their 
sprawly petals of pink, cerise, or carmine, are unique in 
both shape and color, come along all through summer, and 
last a week or more in the house. 
Phlox is another “dominant perennial,” noble, long-lived, 
dependable. You may have almost any color you wish, 
but please plant them in masses of a single color together. 
They look so much better that way. 
Platycodon comes along with its bellflowers just about as 
the Canterbury Bells stop blooming. Their puffed-up, 
Asplenium felix-foemina 
balloon-like buds give them their name of Balloon Flowers, (See page 5) 
