Telephone: Atlantic 1-2022 
Cosmos 
Cosmos 
Annual 
Their free-blooming habit and graceful 
flowers make the Cosmos one of the most 
popular flowers for late summer and fall use. 
Sow seed outdoors about May 1, or, if pos- 
sible, start the seed indoors in early March. 
Early Klondyke, Orange Flare. Deep 
brilliant orange flowers, borne on long stems. 
Nice for cutting. Plants 2 to 3 feet high. 
Pkt. 15 cts., Yoz. 50 cts., oz, $1.50. 
Fiesta. Flowers orange striped with 
scarlet. Bushy plant; very early flowering. 
Pkt 25 'ctss, 2402. p2- 
Extra-Early, Double-crested. An im- 
proved strain of the double-flowering form of 
Cosmos, and while the flowers vary in degree 
of doubleness, all are beautiful. 
Pink Beauty. Soft rosy pink. 
Crimson King. Deep rose-crimson. 
White Queen. Pure white. 
Finest Mixed. All colors. 
All Double-crested Cosmos, pkt. 15 cts., 
I4oz. 85 cts., oz. $2.75 
Mammoth  Early-flowering, Mixed. 
Large-flowered strain which blooms early. 
Best to use for late sowings outdoors. Pkt. 
10 cts., Woz. 35 cts., oz. 90 cts. 
Mammoth Late-flowering. Plants 6 to 
8 feet, blooming in September. Large flowers 
4 to 5 inches across. 
Lady Lenox. Shell-pink. 
Finest Mixed. All colors. 
Either above, pkt. 10 cts., 140z. 35 cts., oz. 90 cts. 
Sensation. A new early-flowering strain 
of Cosmos. Flowers 4 to 5 inches across, on 
long stems, from 4-foot plants. 
Radiance. (AAS) Silver Medal, 1948. 
Deep rose petals overlaid with zone of 
rich crimson. Pkt. 25 cts., Moz. 85 cts. 
Mixed. Pink and white. Pkt. 10 cts., 
Yoz. 50 cts., oz. $1.50. 
Cynoglossum 
Chinese Forget-Me-Not 
Amabile, Blue Bird. The Forget-me- 
not-like flowers are a fines hade of bright blue 
and are in nice sprays suitable for cutting. 
Plants 11% to 2 feet high. Blooms from May 
until frost. Pkt. 15 cts., Y%oz. 60 cts., oz. $2. 
THE |. W. 
Dahlias 
Annual 
It is easy to raise Dahlias from seed, if 
started early in spring in hotbed or in a warm 
window. Set plants out late in May in sunny 
location, a foot or more apart. 
Cactus-flowered, Mixed. Seed saved 
from the best Cactus type. Pkt. 25 cts. 
Double, Finest Mixed. Seed saved from 
some of the best named sorts. Pkt. 10 cts., 
Yoz. 75 cts., oz. $2.50. 
Single, Fine Mixed. Seed saved from 
select flowers of single varieties. Pkt. 10 cts., 
Yyoz. 75 cts., oz. $2.50. 
_ UNWIN’S DWARF HYBRIDS. Blooms 
in sixty days from seed sown in the garden. 
Unsurpassed as cut-flowers. Flowers are semi- 
double, 3 inches in diameter, and come in a 
range of colors. Pkt. 20 cts., Woz. 75 cts., 
oz. $2.50. 
Delphinium 
Perennial Larkspur 
The finest of blue flowers for the hardy 
border are the Perennial Larkspurs. Sow 
the seed in May or June and transplant about 
1 foot apart in early September. 
Belladonna. Long, loose spikes of delicate 
light blue flowers, of supreme value for cut- 
ting. Pkt. 25 cts., Yoz. 75 cts., oz. $1.25. 
Bellamosa. This is a taller, straighter 
plant than Belladonna, and the flowers are 
rich clear blue, several shades darker. Pkt. 
25 cts., Yoz. 75 cts., Woz. $1.25. 
Blackmore & Langdon Strain, Mixed. 
Lovely flowers in’ a wide range of colors. 
Strong plants with excellent spikes. Pkt. 50 cts. 
Cardinale. A native Delphinium with 
long-spurred brilliant scarlet flowers on 3-foot 
plants. Pkt. 25 cts., Yoz. 75 cts., oz. $1.25. 
Kelway’s Gold Medal Hybrids. A 
famous English strain of great size and vigor, 
producing flowers in all shades of blue. Pkt. 
25 cts., Woz. 50 cts., oz. 75 cts., oz. $2.25. 
Pacific Giants. Flowers are of immense 
size, tightly set on straight, strong stems. 
White. Pkt. 50 cts. 
Mixed Colors. Shades of blue, lavender, 
pink, and clear white. Pkt. 50 cts., Moz. 
$1.50, 14oz. $2.50, oz. $4.25, oz. $8. 
Wrexham (Hollyhock Strain). Sturdy 
plants producing conical spikes of flowers 
2 inches or more across, and 214 to 3 feet long. 
Colors range from clear light blues and laven- 
ders to shades of deep blue, purple, and 
mauve. Pkt. 25 cts., Woz. $1.25, Moz. $2. 
Delphiniums 
SCOTT CO., Pittsburgh, Pa. 31 
Dianthus Heddewigi 
Didiscus 
Annual 
Ceerulea. Blue Lace Flower. Exquisite, 
lacelike flower-heads of dainty azure-blue, 
gracefully borne on long stems. Sow seed in 
March in hotbed and outdoors in May and 
June. Pkt. 15 cts., oz. 50 cts., oz. $1.50. 
Dianthus 
A large family of easily grown flowers loved 
for their fragrance and all-round usefulness. 
They are easy to grow and succeed in or- 
dinary garden soil. 
Chinensis, Double. China Pink. An- 
nual. All plants 20 inches high, with flowers in 
clusters, in many bright colors. Free-blooming 
type. Pkt. 10 cts., Moz. 35 cts., oz. $1. 
Deltoides. Maiden Pink. Perennial. A 
creeping rock-garden plant with deep rose- 
colored flowers on 8-inch stems in midsum- 
mer. Pkt. 15 cts., Woz. 75 cts., oz. $2.50. 
Heddewigi. Japanese Pinks. Annual. 
Dwarf, compact plants 10 to 12 inches tall, 
with large, spectacular flowers, fine for cutting 
as well as making a grand garden display. 
Double, Fireball. Crimson. 
Double, Mixed. All colors. 
All Heddewigi, pkt. 10 cts., 40z. 40 cts., oz. $1.25 
Single, Mixed. Pkt. 10 cts., Woz. 
35 cts., oz. $1. 
Plumarius. Garden Grass Pinks. Per- 
ennial. The Pheasant-Eye, or Clove Pink 
should be in every garden. Plants 8 to 10 
inches, with grass-like foliage and fragrant, 
fringed flowers. Sow from April to August. 
Single, Mixed. Many beautiful colors. 
Pkt. 15 cts., oz. 50 cts., oz. $1.50. 
Digitalis - Foxglove 
Biennial 
A plant for the back of the border. Spikes 
of thimble-shaped flowers on plants 3 to 4 feet 
tall, during June and July. Sow in early sum- 
mer and transplant in the fall. 
The Shirley, Giant Hybrids. An excel- 
lent strain with large flowers ranging in color 
from white to dark rose, each with throats 
spotted with crimson, maroon or chocolate. 
Plants 5 to 7 feet tall, with 4-foot spikes of 
bloom. Pkt. 15 cts., Yoz. 75 cts. 
Finest Mixed. All types and colors. Pkt. 
10 cts., oz. 50 cts., oz. $1.50. 
