CLARMHIMEA. A charming flower-bed annual, one to | 
two feet high. Colors, rose, white, red, etc. 
and continuous bloomer. 
appreciated by the amateur. 
A profuse 
Thin to one foot apart. 
Three floral types are shown in the illustration. 
Mixed Colors. 
Packet, 5 cents. 
COCKS COME. 
See Celosia. 
COLEUS. 
greenhouse plants. 
COLLINSIA. 
Beautiful, free bloom- 
ing annuals, 
ing. The prevailing 
colors are white, pur- 
ple and crimson. 
Mixed. Packet, 5 cts. 
COMMELINA. 
A procumbent annual, 
bearing blue and white 
flowers. Suitable for 
vases, baskets or rock 
work. Showy and sat- 
isfactory. Blue and 
white mixed. PkKt., 5c. 
CONVOLVULUS 
WENOR. Dwarf 
Morning Glory. Showy 
plants, with exceed- 
ingly handsome, rich 
colored flowers. In beds and borders they produce a 
brilliant effect. They are always greatly admired on 
the Briar Crest trial grounds. They grow to a height 
of about one foot, and require no supports. They are 
of easiest culture. 
Tricolor. All colors mixed. Packet, 5 cents 
CORNFLOWER. See Centaurea Cyanus. 
COSMOS. A comparatively new flower, but now 
a standard favorite everywhere. Developed into a va- 
riety of shapes and colors. Three to five feet high. 
Blooms profusely in late summer and autumn. The 
season of bloom can be lengthened by starting the seeds 
in frames or window boxes, in early spring. Excellent 
for cut flowers. Fine mixed. Packet, 5 cents. 
CREPIS. Hawk’s Beard. Dwarf annual of easy 
culture, blooming profusely. Useful for cut flowers. 
‘One foot high. Mixed colors. Packet, 5 cents. 
CROTOLARIA. Crofolaria retusa. Yellow Flow- 
ering Pea, Flowers of rich golden yellow, of true sweet 
CLARKIA. 
the Eckford varieties. 
The blossoms are borne 
Over forty on one 
spike. The bloom 
profuse until the com- 
ing of frost. A low 
growing, branching 
plant, with every 
branchlet bearing flow- 
ers. The leaves are 
dark green, and the 
seed pods when shaken 
produce a sound like a 
child’s rattle. Seed 
should be soaked in 
water for about twelve 
hours and started in 
the window or hot bed. 
Pkt., 10 cts., 0z., 50 cts. 
CUPHEA. Cigar 
Plant. Compact little 
plants, about eight or 
ten inches high, bear- 
ing slendez, tubular flowers of various shades of red 
and purple. Suitable for the flower bed or for potting. 
Platyeentra. Very fine for pot culture. Tube 
scarlet ; tip black and white. Packet, 15 cents. 
CYANUWS. See Centaurea Cyanus. 
DAHLIA. Dahlia plants from seed sown in the 
Spring will bloom beautifully the first summer, and 
give almost or quite the same satisfaction as bulbs. I 
offer seed that if started under glass and transplanted 
COLLINSIA. 
Plant of easy culture. Much | 
See | 
suitable | 
for grouping or mass- | 
pea form, as large as | 
in racemes ; sometimes | 
is | 
offer is from large, 
fine flowers; all the 
choicest varieties. 
Mixed. Pkt., 10 cts. 
DAISY. Bellis. 
A favorite plant for 
beds or pot culture, or 
for edging in shady 
situations. In bloom 
from April to June. 
Almost hardy. This 
is the famous little 
double daisy often 
carried through the 
winter in frames, for 
early spring bloom- 
ing. It blooms best 
in cool weather. Six 
inches high. 
Giant Flow- 
ered White. 
Large, with flat petals. 
Pure white. Pkt., 10c. 
Longfellow. 
Dark rose flowers of 
great size. Pkt., 10c. 
Double Mixed. Best sorts. Packet, 10 cents. 
DATURA. (See novelties.) Trumpet Flower or 
Ghost Flower. Coarse but very showy plants, three to 
five feet high, bearing long, trumpet-shaped hanging 
blossoms nearly a foot in length. The seed should be 
started indoors or under glass at the North, in order to 
hasten the blooming period. Give plenty of room to 
each plant—two or three feet. The Datura may be 
lifted in the fall and taken to the greenhouse for win- 
ter blooming. Deserving of general attention. 
Cornucopia. 
Horn of Plenty. Flow- 
ers eight or ten inches 
long, and five to seven 
inches across, each 
flower being triple, as 
though one trumpet 
were inserted within 
another. White, mar- 
bled with purple. 
Packet, 10 cents. 
Golden Queen. 
Bush 8 feet high. 
Showy yellow double 
flowers 10 inches long. 
Packet, 10 cents. 
Meteloides 
Wrightii. Ghost 
Flower. White and li- 
lac. Fragrant. Pkt., 5c. 
DIANTHIUS. 
Pinks, (See novelties, ) 
This interesting group 
includes the so-called 
Chinese and Japanese 
The bi- 
COMMELINA. 
DIANTHUS, HEDDEWIGI!. 
pinks and the hardy perennial or clove pinks. 
| ennial sorts flower freely the first year from seed, and 
| hence have a place here, They are usually quite hardy, 
and give a greater profusion of bloom the second year 
than the first. The seeds of all kinds of Dianthus may 
be sown in the open ground, and thinned to stand six 
or eight inches apart in the row. The plants spread 
rapidly, and make ornamental masses of growth. The 
colorings of these hardy pinks are exceedingly rich and 
varied, and their beauty is scarcely surpassed by any 
flowers of the garden. Their cultural requirements are 
| simple, and they are in universal favor. 
Chinensis. 
mixed. Packet, 5 cents; ounce, 25 cents. 
HMeddewigii. Double Japan Pink. Seed saved 
from the best double flowers only. Fine collection of 
colors. Packet, 10 cents; ounce, 50 cents. 
Emperialis. Double Imperial Pink. Fine mix- 
ture of colors. Packet, 5 cents, ounce, 50 cents. 
Diadematis. Diadem Pink. True; fine extra 
double mixed. 
My strain of 
this 
pink is unri 
to the garden in good, rich soil, the last of May, will | 
give a magnificent display of the brightest colors in 
August, and bloom continuously until heavy frosts. 
Extra Choice Large Flowering Double. | 
Mixed. 
double sorts, embracing all the new varieties. 
mixture I know of. Packet, 15 cents. 
Double Extra Fine Mixed. 
twenty varieties. Packet, 10 cents. 
Superb New Simgle. No flower is more beauti- 
ful or brilliant than the new single dahlia. It begins to 
bloom in July and continues until October, and in shel- 
tered places will last until November. The seed I 
Very fine ; about 
CROTOLARIA RETUSA. 
Seed saved from largest flowered and most | 
The best | 
| canary yellow with an 
4, orange blotch at the 
P | base 
| are flat and wide open, 
2 others very deep with 
valled in size o 
flowers and va- 
riety of colors. 
Packet, 10 cts. 
DWARF 
MORNING 
GLORY. A 
s: bed of these 
make a fine 
sight; very free 
Sa iar yo flowering. See 
Daisy, GIANT FLowereD WHITE. Giranaiienilec, 
ESCHSCHOLTZIA. California Poppy. Low 
growing plants with finely cut foliage of a silver gray 
color. The seed should be sown in shallow drills in the 
open ground, where the plants are to remain. Thin to 
eight inches apart each way. Bloom begins a few 
weeks after the germination of the seed, and continu- 
ous until late autumn. The plant attains a height of 
one foot or less. The 
prevailing color of the 
flowers is bright yel- 
low. See illustration. 
Maritima. Cross 
of Malta. Bright yel- 
low, with dark orange 
markings. Pkt., 10 cts. 
Golden West. 
Flowers four to six 
inches in diameter. 
The flowers are light 
of each petal. 
They are beautiful and 
variously formed,some 
some saucer shaped, 
flaring edges. They 
are simply handsome. 
Packet, 10 cents. 
Mixed. All colors. 
Pkt., 5 cts.; 0z., 25 cts. 
Dantia, DouBle. 
106 
China or Indian Pink. Finest double 
beautiful | 
EUPHORBIA. Robust plants with handsome 
foliage, growing from two to four feet high. They are 
propagated for their ornamental appearance. 
Wariegata. Snow on the Mountain. A showy 
border plant, with foliage veined and margined with 
white ; very attractive. 
Packet, 5 cents. 
Heterophylla. 
Fire on the Mountain. 
} Ornamental leaves, 
which in summer and 
autumn take on a 
deeper fiery appear- 
ance, with only agreen 
tip. Valuable as pot 
plants. An annual 
variety of Poinsettia. 
Packet, 10 cents. 
EVENING 
PRIMROSE. 
@nothera. Sun- 
drops. This plant is 
of the easiest culture, 
and deserves a place 
in every flower gar- 
den. The flowers open 
every evening just at 
twilight; not gradual- 
ly, but almost sudden- 
ly, in a very interest- 
ing manner, and are 
visited by moths at 
night. They close quite 
early in the morning. Fine mixed. Pkt., 5 cts. 
FEVERFEW. Matricaria eximia. Free flower- 
ing plants, succeeding in any garden soil. Fine for bed- 
ding or pot culture, blooming until frost. Double white. 
Packet, 5 cents. 
FORGET - ME - 
NOT. See Myositis. 
Also see novelties. 
FOUR-O’CLOCK. 
See Marvel of Peru. 
FRENCH MAR- 
GU EXSITES. See 
Chrysantbemum, 
among perennials. ; 
GAILLARDIA, 
Halt-hardy and ex- 
ceedingly beautiful 
annuals growing one 
to two feet high. The 
EUPHORBIA VARIEGATA. 
flowers are daisy-like 
in shape, and are use- 
ful for cutting. Sow 
early in spring in 
shallow drills, and 
thin out to stand ten 
inches apart. 
Amblyodon. 
Clear, blood red. ; 
Packet, 5 cents. GAILLARDIA, LORENZIANA. 
Aurora. Gold, crimson and white. Pkt., 5 cts. 
Sum Missed. Gold and scarlet. Packet, 5 cts. 
Loremziama. Double. Mixed colors. Pkt., 10 cts. 
Fine Mixed. Packet, 5 cents; ounce, 25 cents, 
GILIA. Free blooming dwarf hardy annuals, for 
massing in beds ; six to twelve inches high. Sow in the 
open ground. Mixed colors. Packet, 5 cents. 
GLADIOLUS. 
A summer flower- 
ing bulbous plant, 2 
to 3 feet high. Col- 
ors very bright, 
ranging through 
many shades of 
pink, scarlet, yellow, 
white, etc. Can be 
grown to bloom the 
first season from 
seed, producing 
bulbs of great value 
for the second year’s 
blooming. 
Wybrida. 
Mixed. Pkt., 10 cts. 
GODETIA. 
Beautitul plants of 
easy culture in any 
good soil, but bloom- 
ing best in cool situ- 
ations. Remarkable 
for the delicacy of 
their fine, large blos- 
soms, which are 3 
or 4 inches across, 
of brilliant color and 
satiny texture. 
Lady Satin 
Rose. Deep rose 
ESCHSCHOLTZIA. 
pink, the surface shining like satin, one foot high. 
Makes a nice border plant. Packet, 5 cents. 
Extra Fine Mixed. Packet, 5 cts.; ounce, 25 cts. 
Pyrethrum 
GOLDEN FEATHER. 
Pale, golden yellow 
beautiful fern-like foli- 
age; very ornamental 
for ribbon gardening 
or borders. It makes 
a desirable plant for 
edging for flower beds 
or walks when the 
young plants are set 6 
Inches apart in the row 
and the flower spikes 
kept cut off. Very 
rich effect in connec- 
tion with Coleus and 
Centaurea Candidissi- 
ma. Packet, 10 cents. 
GY PSOPHILA. 
Gypsophila muralis. 
A dwarf, compact an- 
nual, about eighteen 
inches high, used for 
edgings and rock work. 
Flowers pink, nice for 
bouquets. Pkt., 5 cts, 
aureum. 
GopeETIA, LADY SATIN ROSE. 
= 
IRnUUuY—onr aSu 
a 
3 
rt 
I 
a 
§ 
g 
5 
a 
= 
= 
a 
z 
fo 18287-1020. 
c) 
"*SQHUns GQWHIA 
O23 SADPIO [JV ssoiIppyv 
2 
z 
E 
E 
bs 
eS 
= 
> 
cS 
IS 
E 
"V'°S°A “Vg ‘uyydlapuljUud ‘2292138 2200TTT TT2T ON 
