Canton 2, Ohio 
Novelties 
New Flowers—Vegetables For You 
Try these new and improved varieties in your garden 
this year. We believe the results will be very satisfying. 
Aquilegia McKana’s Giant 
All-America Winner for 1955 
A long lived perennial Columbine, the finest 
yet, for coloring and the extra large long spurred 
flowers. 
201 McKana’'s Giant. Pkt. 30c, 146 oz. $1.50. 
Celosia, Toreador 
All-America Winner for 1955 
A beautiful velvety red Comb or Cockscomb 
type Celosia that will make a showy bed or border. 
Plants uniformly 18 inches tall. 
351 Celosia Toreador. Pkt. 30c, 1/45 oz. 70c. 
Marigold, Lemondrop 
Well named, a 9 inch tall compact bushy plant 
covered with bright lemon yellow blooms. Uniform 
plants, excellent for edgings and border. 
877 Lemondrop. Pkt. 15c, 146 oz. 40c. 
Morning Glory, Candy Pink 
The first true pink Morning Glory. Flowers are 
large (4 in.), stay open only one day but fresh ones 
replace them so the vine is full of bright color. 
Vines grow quickly reaching 15 to 20 feet. 
904 Candy Pink. Pkt. 20c, 1% oz. 60c. 
Petunia, Prima Donna 
All-America Winner for 1955 
The newest of the fine dwarf fringed large 
flowering hybrids. It is bright rose pink with vigor, 
uniformity and prettily fringed and wavy flowers. 
1002 Prima Donna. Pkt. 50c, 2 pkts. 90c. 
Sweet Peas, Little Sweetheart 
Brand new in Sweet Peas, the plants instead of 
vining are little bushes only 8 inches high covered 
with good size Spencer type flowers in all the 
Sweet Pea colors. Plants are early and continuous 
blooming. 
1290 Little Sweetheart. Mixed pkt. 50c. 
Zinnias, New Giant Hybrids 
The finest of all the large flowering Zinnias, 
available now in several separate colors and mixed. 
1473 Eskimo. White. Pkt. 20c, 146 oz. 45c. 
1476 Floradale Scarlet. Pkt. 15c, 4% oz. 50c. 
1477 Riverside Beauty. Salmon pink. 
Pkt. 15c, 14 oz. 50c. 
1478 Blaze. Orange scarlet. Pkt. 25c, 46 oz. 60c. 
1479 Sunny Boy. Yellow. Pkt. 20c, 146 oz. 45c. 
1474 Giant Hybrids Mixed. Pkt. 15c, ¥ oz. 50c. 
Green Bean, Wade 
All-America Gold Medal 
Handsome, tender, long pods on a vigorous 
disease resistant plant. The pods are smooth, lack- 
ing much of the ‘‘fuzziness’’ common to beans. 
They lose moisture slower, staying green, fresh and 
better to eat for a longer time than others. 
1% |b. 30c, Ib. 55c, 2 Ibs. $1.05, 5 Ibs. $2.50. 
Sweet Corn, Golden Beauty 
All-America Winner for 1955 
Fine new early hybrid variety, slightly earlier 
than Marcross, a heavier yielder and noticeably 
disease resistant. You will enjoy its fine quality. 
14 |b. 40c, Ib. 75c, 2 Ibs. $1.45. 
Pop Corn, Minhybrid 250 
Best described as hybrid Hulless with very tender 
large kernels without hulls. It is a much better 
yielder than the old Jap Hulless. 
V4 Ib. 35c, 1% Ib. 60c, Ib. $1.10. 
Muskmelon, Pennsweet 
All-America Winner for 1955 
Very early, rather small melon, with thick flesh 
of delicious quality. Fine for the home garden and 
local market. Pkt. 25c, 2 0z. 40c, oz. 75c. 
Watermelon, Rhode Island Red 
A medium sized, oval melon with striped tough 
rind. It grows a nice size for home gardens and 
ripens in about 75 days, plenty early enough for 
northern gardeners. The crisp red flesh is of excel- 
lent flavor. 
Pkt. 15c, oz. 40c, 14 Ib. $1.20. 
Pea, Wando—Stands Heat 
A variety that you can expect to yield well even 
if planting is delayed so that hot weather comes 
early. Pods are not large, about 31% inches long, 
but tightly filled with good sweet peas. Plants are 
about 2% feet tall. 
Im |b. 25c, Ib. 45c, 2 Ibs. 85c, 5 Ibs. $2.00. 
Tomato, Brookston 
A good sized, solid, deep red tomato that ripens 
a few days earlier than Rutgers. It sets fruit excep- 
tionally well, even in hot weather and gives a 
heavy total yield. It is bred for disease resistance. 
Those who tried it last year were very pleased with 
both yield and fine quality. 
Pkt. 20c, % oz. 50c, 14 02. 90c. 
