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‘ COLLINSIA. 
‘< Beautiful, free blooming annuals, suit- 
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® able for grouping or massing. The pre- 
5 vailing colors are white, purple and 
™ crimson, Mixed. Packet, 5 cents. 
is CONVOLVULUS. 
«= growing easily in any situation. 
A blue, white, pink, purple, etc. 
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‘e colored flowers all summer. 
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a} morning glory. 
& Morning Glory. See Novelties. Beau- 
5 tiful and free blooming annual climbers, 
Colors, 
The most 
Be popular climbing plants in the world. 
Major. The popular tall growing 
Fine mixed. Packet, 
5 cents; ounce, 10 cents. 
= Minor. Tricolor. Dwarf morn- 
is ing glory. Showy and exceedingly hand- 
some, with richly colored flowers. In 
s beds and borders they produce a brilliant 
© effect. They are always greatly admired 
zg on my trial grounds. They grow to a 
~ height of about 1 foot, and require no 
® supports. They are of easiest culture. 
. All colors mixed. Packet, 5 cents. 
© COREOPSIS. 
2 This is a hardy form of calliopsis. The 
= coreopsis is one of the most showy of 
& hardy perennials. The height is 2 to 3 
m™ feet, and it bears a profusion of bright 
bal 'The flow- 
sm ers are 2 to 3 inches across. Culture easy, 
‘<5 2nd graceful form. 
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© rich and desirable. 
- a8 it will grow and thrive everywhere. 
© Sunshine. Best coreopsis grown. 
Every spring it reappears in vigorous 
Its very large blos- 
Soms are of dazzling yellow color, and 
are borne in the utmost profusion during 
Pa long period. Pkt., 10 cts.; 0z., 35 cts. 
Lanceolata. Bright gold. Very 
Pkt., 5c.; 0z., 25c. 
ial CORN FLOWER. 
1 See Centaurea cyanus. 
eZ COSMOS. 
i Also see Novelties. 
A tall, graceful, 
§% showy annual, enjoying the widest pop- 
- ularity. It has been developed into a 
= variety of shapes and colors. Three to 
five feet high. 
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Wow SS Oe 6 et Se Peed 63 OO 38S BRO SE REET HON Som 

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. 

if Fine Mixed. Pkt.,5c.;07., 5c. 
ie COWSLIP. 
16 See Primula. 
= CREPIS. 
Hed Hawk’s Beard. Pretty dwarf annuals 
fiw Of easy culture, deserving a place in 
te every garden; blooming profusely. Use- 
og ful for cut flowers. 
eg Mixed Colors. Packet, 5 cents. 
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a) CYCLAMEN, GIGANTEUM. 
‘3 CYCLAMEN. 
- One of the choicest of all the green- 
‘8 house or window plants. Root bulbous 
‘m= in shape; foliage rich and beautiful; 
™ flowers bird like and fragrant. Colors, 
is white, pink, crimson, etc. Should be 
| = sown in light soil, containing leaf mold. 
ie Persicum. Choice mixed. Pkt., 10c. 
'@ Giganteum. Beautiful mottled 
'e leaves and mammoth flowers, Pkt., 20c. 
5 CYPERUS. 
el See Umbrella Plant. 
Z CROTALARIA. 
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M® Yellow Flowering Pea. A _ beautiful, 
low growing, bushy annual, with flowers 
@ of rich golden yellow, of true sweet pea 
3 form. The blossoms are borne in ra- 
© cemes; sometimes over forty to one 
spike. The leaves are dark green, and 
@ the seed pods when shaken produce a 
6 sound like a child’s rattle. 
€ WRetusa. Pkt., 10 cts.; 0z., 50 cts. 
g CUPHEA. 
| 
lo 
_Cigar Plant. A compact and desirable 
little annual, about 8 to 10 inches high, 
® bearing slender, tubular flowers of vari- 
m OUS shades of red and purple. Suitable 
for the flower bed or for potting. 
Platycentra. Very fine for pot 
@ culture. Tube scarlet; tip black and 
& white. Packet, 10 cents. 


CYPRESS VINE. 
See Ipomcea quamoclit. 
DANMMLIA. 
Dahlia plants from seed sown early 
in the spring will bloom beautifully 
the first summer, and give a magnificent 
display of the brightest colors in August 
or Sept. The dahlia is a tender peren- 
nial. Roots must be housed in winter. 
Gloria. New. Double anemone like 
flowers. See Novelties. Packet, 10 cts. 
Extra Choice Large Flower- 
ing Double, Mixed. Seed saved 
from largest flowered and most double 
sorts, embracing all the new varieties. 
The best mixture I know of. Pkt., l5c. 
Double Extra Fime Mixed. 
Very fine; about 20 varieties. Pkt., 10c. 
Superb New Single. The seed 
of this superb new type was saved from 
my Panmure Seed Gardens, and em- 
braces the largest single sorts, among 
which there is a very large per cent, of 
the single large flowered 20th Century. 
All colors, finest mixed. Paclxet, 10 cts. 
DAISY. Bellis. 
Almost hardy perennial plants, adapt- 
ed to pot or frame culture. They are in 
high favor for open air edgings and bor- 
ders, blooming freely from April to 
June. These famous little double daisies 
are held in universal esteem. Height, 
6 inches; they bloom profusely, espe- 
cially in cool weather, in earliest spring. 
Giant Flowered White. Ex- 
ceedingly large; pure white flowers, witb 
Packet, 10 cents. 
Including both 
Packet, 10 cents. 
flat petals. 
Double Mixed. 
white and pink sorts. 

Daisy, DousLe Mixeo. 
DATURA. 
Trumpet Flower. This popular plant, 
with its grand blossoms, is worthy of 
continued esteem. 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—2 or 3 feet. The datura may be 
lifted in the fall and taken to the green- 
house tor winter blooming. 
Cornucopia (Horn of Plenty). 
Flowers white and royal purple; 8 to 10 
inches long, and 5 to 7 inches across the 
mouth, each appearing to be made up 
of three distinct flowers. The bloom is 
both handsome and fragrant. Packet, 
5 cents. 
Golden Queen. Height and ex- 
tent of plant 3 feet. Flowers golden yel- 
low, double, triple or quadruple, and as 
large as the flowers of Cornucopia. 
Rich, handsome and attractive. Packet, 
5 cents. 
Double White. 
ble and pure white. 
character is similar 
Packet, 5 cents. 
DELPEHINIUM. 
Perennial Larkspur. An old garden 
favorite. Seed sown in the early spring 
will produce blooms the same year, but 
the flowers will be more profuse in sub- 
sequent years. The blue color of lark- 
spur is almost unique among flowers in 
its clearness and intensity. See larkspur 
for the annual sorts. 
New Hybrids Mixed. Far ex- 
ceeding the old-fashioned sorts in size 
and beauty; tall, stately and highly or- 
nhamental; many colors and shades. 
Packet, 10 cents; 3 packets, 25 cents. 
Choice Mixed. Embracing all the 
best old sorts. Pkt., 5 cts.; 07., 50 cts. 
DIANTHUS. 
Pinks. See Novelties. The annual 
and biennial sorts of dianthus flower 
freely the first year from seed. They 
are quite hardy, and often give a greater 
profusion of bloom the second year than 
the first. The seeds of all kinds of dian- 
thus may be sown in the open ground, 
and thinned to stand 6 or 8 inches apart 
in the row. The plants spread rapidly, 
and make ornamental masses of growth. 
The colorings of these hardy pinks are 
Exquisitely dou- 
The shape and 
to Cornucopia. 


exceedingly rich and varied and their 
beauty is scarcely surpassed by any 
flower of the garden. Their cultural re- 
quirements are simple, and they are in 
universal favor. 
Chimensis. China or Indian Pink. 
Finest double mixed. Pkt., 5c.; 0z., 25c. 
HMeddewigii. Double Japan Pink. 
Seed saved from the best double flowers 
only. Fine collection of colors. Packet, 
5 cents; ounce, 50 cents. 
Em perialis. Double Imperial Pink. 
Fine mixture of colors. Packet, 5 cents; 
ounce, 50 cents. 
Diadematis. Diadem Pink. True; 
fine extra double. My strain of this 
beautiful pink is unrivaled in size of 
flowers and variety of colors. Pkt., 10c. 
DiaANTHUS, HEDDEWIGII. 
DIGITALIS. 
Foxglove. A hardy perennial plant, 
especially useful among shrubbery and 
in half shady places, though it grows 
equally well in open situations. Long 
racemes of beautiful flowers. Colors, 
purple, white, yellow, rose, etc. Some 
are beautifully spotted. Height, 3 or 4 
feet. Much admired. 
Maclura Superba. A splendid 
new spotted strain. Packet, 5 cents. 
Gloxiniafiora. An improved 
strain, with handsomely marked flow- 
ers. Packet, 10 cents. 
Wery Fime Mixed. All shades 
and markings. Packet, 5 cents. 
DOLICHOS. 
Hyacinth Bean. A rapid growing an- 
nual climber bearing clusters of white 
and purple bean-shaped blossoms. Fif- 
teen feet. Highly desirable. 
Daylight. See Novelties. 
Lablab Mixed. White, red, and 
purple flowers. Pkt., 5 cts.; oz., 20 cts. 
DUSTY MILLER. 
See Centaurea. 
DUTCHMAN’S PIPE. 
See Aristolochia. 
DWARF MORNING GLORY. 
See Convolvulus. 
ESCHSCHOLTZIA. 
California Poppy. Extremely hand- 
some, low and quick growing, annual 
plants, with finely cut foliage, and 
cheerful blossoms. Nothing can excel 
the eschscholtzia in brightness, and it 
deserves a place in every garden border. 
Sow seeds in very shallow drills, in the 
open ground, where the plants are to re- 
main. Thin to 8 inches. Bloom begins 
in a few weeks and lasts until frost. The 
plant attains a height of 1 foot. The 
prevailing color is bright yellow. 
Golden West. 
inches in diameter. The flowers are 
light canary yellow with an orange 
blotch at the base of each petal. They 
are beautiful and variously formed, 
some are flat and wide open, some sau- 
cer shaped, others very deep with flar- 
ing edges. They are simply handsome. 
Packet, 5 cents; ounce, $1.00. 
Douglassi. A new dwarf type, 
only 10 inches high, with finely cut gray- 
ish green foliage. The flowers are clear 
lemon yellow with orange markings, 
and somewhat cup shaped. Its early 
and profuse production of flowers is one 
of its distinctive merits. Pkt., 5 cts. 
Mixed. Allsorts. Pkt., 5c.; 0z., 25c. 
EUCHARDIUM. 
A pretty annual attaining a helght of 
12 inches; spreading growth. It is a 
rapid grower and very free flowering. 
The rose and white flowers are an inch 
or more across. 
Mixed. Roseand white. Pkt., 5c. 
EULALIA. 
‘Japonica Zebrina. Zebra Grass. 
A robust perennial grass from Japan, 
forming handsome clumps. Six feet. 
Hardy. Beautiful plumes. Leaves va- 
Tiegated; crosswise bars. Pkt., 10 cts. 
119 


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