Ageratunt 
827. MIDGET BLUE. H. A. It has been quite difficult to produce dwarf Agera- 
tums true to name from seed. However, Ageratum Midget Blue will come prac- 
tically true to form and color from seed. The plants are very dwarf, not over 
two to three inches in height and smothered with small true Ageratum blue flow- 
ers. The foliage is delicate and fine. Excellent plant for edging. Pkt., 15c; 2 
pkts., 25c. 
= a Sa, 
Ageratum, Midget Blue 
f ? | ——— 
H. A. means Hardy An- 
} nual. 
H. P. means Hardy Per- 
i ennial. 
| 
All flower seeds are quoted 
postpaid. 
Ma . ld 1037. DOUBLE HARMONY HY- 
GUGG BRIDS, MIXED. H. A. Com- 
pact plants are from twelve to 
fourteen inches in height, 100 per cent double, and 
flowering commences about two and one-half months 
after seed is sown. The flowers are of medium size, 
rather large for the French type, averaging one and 
three-fourths inches in diameter. They do not have 
the strong Marigold odor. The color range includes 
the popular Harmony, a lovely golden-orange shade, 
distinct golden-yellow, and innumerable blotched and 
striped combinations of golden-orange with maroon 
and various shades of gold and lemon-yellow with 
contrasting dark maroon. Flowers have the familiar 
crested center flanked with several rows of broad 
guard petals. Pkt., 15c; 2 pkts., 25c; 14 oz., 35c. 
Ni ia 
1069. HIPPOMANICA (Dwarf Cup Flower). One 
of the most prolific flowering plants that we know 
of. It starts to flower when the plants are only two 
inches tall, or about fifteen weeks after the seed 
has been sown, and keeps right on until heavy 
frosts. The plant at all times is neat and compact 
appearing, the new flowers covering the older flow- 
ers and seed pods. The lavender-blue flowers en- 
riched by a touch of yellow in the center are most 
charming, Plants are very dwarf, compact, and not 
over six inches high with a spread of ten inches. 
Foliage is light gray green. Recommended for an 
edging or border plant. Very beautiful in window 
boxes or flower pots. Seed slow to germinate and 
Oo ° 4H 7 A should be carefully started early in flats. Pkt., 20c; 
Marigold, Mission Giant-Goldsmit 
é 10351/. MISSION GIANT- 
Marigold GOLDSMITH. H. A. Mission 
Giant is a strain of Marigold of 
medium height with giant 
Chrysanthemum blooms. They 
are base branching, producing from eight to twelve 
stems of excellent cutting length. The laterals or side 
branches produce just as large, if not larger blooms, 
than the center stems. It is very early, coming into 
bloom fully two weeks ahead of the ordinary Sunshine 
types. The ball-shaped blooms measure from four to eae ees 
five inches in diameter and resemble giant incurved innia, Linearius 
Chrysanthemums, Goldsmith is a rich golden orange 
which makes a brilliant display in the garden. Pkt, 
15c; 2 pkts., 25c. 
2 pkts., 35c. 
1333. LINEARIUS ORANGE. H. A. This 
little dwarf Zinnia much resembles a 
Daisy. It begins to flower when the 
plants are about six inches tall and 
keeps right on throughout the season 
until the late frosts of autumn. Flow- 
ers are single and a lovely shade of 
golden-orange with a delicate lemon- 
yellow stripe through each petal, while 
the center is a dark brown. Plants 
reach a height of eight to ten inches. 
Literally hundreds of flowers are open 
at a time. Pkt., 15c; 2 pkts., 25ce. 
Petunia 
1085. RADIANCE. H. A. Radiance 
received a 1940 silver medal in the 
All-America awards. It: is. a rich, 
brilliant cerise-rose with enough un- 
derlying salmon to remove the harsh- 
ness commonly found in a cerise-rose 
variety. The throat is a golden yellow 
below where the bloom starts to flare 
which adds much life to the Petunia. 
It is decidedly free flowering through- 
out the season. The blooms measure 
2'l to 3 inches in diameter. Pkt., 
15c; 2 pkts., 25c. 
Petunia, Radiance — 40 — 
Nierembergia, Hippomanica 
