Choice Flower Seeds 
COREOPSIS 
Lanceolata. This is one of the finest hardy perennial 
plants ; flowers bright golden yellow, large and showy. Pkt. 5e, 
WM. ELLIOTT & SONS, NEW YORK 29 
COCKSCOMB (Celosia cristata) 
cockscomb. To produce fine combs the soil , \ \ ip Z —w Golden Glory. 
and the plants should 
be forwarded in hot- 
bed, though showy 
plants may be raised 
from seed planted in 
open ground in May. 
The oftener they are 
transplanted or 
shifted the larger and 
more beautiful they 
grow. 
Dwarf Mixed. 
Pkt. 5 cts. 
Glasgow Prize. 
Animproved variety, 
producing large 
blooms of dark crim- 
son. Pkt. 5 cts. 
Empress. This 
variety produces 
combs of colossal proportions; have been grown measuring 45 inches 
from tip to tip; rich velvety crimson. 
Japanese (Celosia Japonica). 
Pkt. 5 ets. 
Collection of six separate sorts, 25 ets, 
COSMOS 
This is one of our most useful 
and beautiful autumn flowers. 
To get it in bloom early, the seed 
should be sown in May in the open 
ground where the plants are de- 
sired to bloom, and the seedlings 
allowed togrow and flower with- 
out being transplanted. 
Mammoth Perfection. 
The flowers are double the size 
of C. hybridus, the petals are 
broader, overlapping and deeply 
ribbed. For cuttingit is one of 
the finest flowers grown, lasting 
in water two weeks. The plants 
are five to six feet high, pyra- 
midal form, and one mass of 
feathery emerald-green foliage, 
studded with mammoth flowers 
of white, pink or crimson, long 
after more tender flowers have 
been destroyed by frost. 
Pure White. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Light Pink. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Crimson. Pkt. 10cets. 
Mixed. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Large-Flowering Mixed. 
Pkt. 5 cts. 
Klondike. Flowers 2% to3 
inches across, rich orange-yellow, 
produced in great abundance. 
Pkt. 10.cts. 
Early-Flowering. Seed of 
this variety may be sown in the 
Open ground in May, and will 
bloom in August, continuing un- 
tillate in fall. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Cucumis Flexuosus 
(Snake Cucumber) 
An ornamental climber  re- 
markable for the luxuriance and 
rapidity ofits growth. Fine for 
trellises. Pkt. 5 cts. 
COWSLIP 
Six inches. Pkt. 10 ets. 
A branching variety of great beauty. 
(Primula veris) 
A well-known hardy perennial, flowering early inspring; very fragrant. 
An improved variety 
ofthe lanceolata type, 
producing long- 
stemmed, immense 
rich yellow flowers, 
shaded with orange, 
flowering in pro- 
fusion for a long 
period during the 
summer; unequaled 
for cutting; grows 
anywhere. Pkt. 10c. 
CUPHEA 
These are pretty, 
free-flowering, half- 
hardy perennials well 
adapted for the house 
or garden border. 
Platycentra. Scarlet, black and white. Pkt. 10 cts. 
Roezlii. Pyramidal-formed; flowers yellow and red. Pkt. 10 ets. 
CYCLAMEN PERSICUM GIGANTEUM 
This strain of Cyclamen is unquestionably the most important floral 
Cyclamen Persicum Gigantenm 
introduction of the season. It 
differs from our giant type of 
Cyclamen in the foliage, having 
a broad, lace-like fringe around 
the edge. The fiowers are of the 
giant form, embracing the lead- 
ing colors, and are frequently 
fimbriated. The delicate lace- 
edged leaves, however, form the 
great charm of this facinating 
variety. 
Giganteum album. Pure 
white. Pkt. 25 ets. 
Rubrum. Dark Red. Pkt. 
25 ets. 
Roseum. Bright rose. Pkt. 
25 cts. 
Duke of Connaught. Crim- 
son. Pkt. 25 ets. 
Picturatum. White, claret 
base. Pkt. 25 cts. 
Gigantcum, Finest Mixed. 
Alleolors. Pkt. 25 ets. 
Williams’ Superb Strain. 
In original packages. Pkt. 75 ets. 
Fine Mixed Colors. 
Pkt. 10 cts. 
CYPRESS VINE 
The most graceful climbing 
plants, with fern-like foliage, 
bearing clusters of small, star- 
shaped flowers. 
Scarlet. Very brilliant. 
Pkt. 5 ets. 
White. Beautiful and grace- 
ful. Pkt. 5 cts. 
Ivy-Leaved. Ivy-shaped 
leavesand scarlet flowers. Pkt. 
10 cts. 
Mixed. Pkt. 5 cts., oz. 50 ets. 
CYPERUS ALTERNIFOLIUS (Umbrella Plant) 
A strikingly handsome foliage plant, equally well adapted for the green- 
house or open ground, and easily raised from seed. Pkt. 15 cts. 
The Isbell Mole Trap will catch those troublesome moles. 
