MISS C. H. LIPPINCOTT 



10 



HUDSON, WISCONSIN 



Bear in mind August and September are the best 

 months for starting your Perennials and a few of 

 them are always an addition to your garden. 



A Small List of Good Perennial Seeds. 

 Alyssum — Saxatile — (Gold Dust). . . .per pkt, 



Aquilegia — (Columbine) mixed " 



Arabis Alpina (Pure White) " " 



Campanula (Canterbury Bells) " " 



Chrysanthemum (Hardy Per.) " " 



Carnation (Extra Fine Double Mixed) " 



Calliopsis, Lancealota " " 



Perennial Larkspur (Delphinum) .. . . " ' 



Daisy Shasta " " 



Dianthus (Pheasant-Eye Pinks).... " " 



Digitalis (Foxglove) " " 



Hcllyhocks (Double Mixed) " " 



Lathryus (Perennial Pea) " " 



Poppies (Hardy Oriental) ' " 



Platycodon (Chinese Bell Flower).. " " 



Sweet William " " 



Wallflower (Double Mixed) " " 



Dear Miss Lippincott: 



Have been giving you my patronage the past 

 five or six years and am so pleased with the 

 fair usage have always received that you seem 

 like a dear, dear friend, everything turning out 

 just as you represent and have told many others 

 of the kindness you show to patrons in prompt- 

 ness and fidelity that I must say from my 

 heart I think of you as I would a dear friend. 

 Cordially, 



Lyndora. Pa. Mrs. J. Criswell. 



Bachelor's Button, Double. 



It has been so perfected that fully SO per 

 cent of the flowers are double and semi- 

 double; and also increased in size and pre- 

 sent many bright colors and distinct mark- 

 ings which have hitherto been unknown in 

 this old-fashioned favorite 

 flower. 



Pkt., 75 seeds, 5 cts. 



Bird of Paradise, 



Poinciana Gillesi. 

 The color of the flower is a 

 golden yellow, measuring two 

 and a half inches across, with 

 Shape as shown in illustration, 

 and is produced in very large 

 trusses. The most beautiful 

 part of the flower is the large 

 pistils which are spread out in 

 fan-like form, and are of 

 bright crimson color. The foli- 

 age is also highly decorative, 

 reminding one of a very deli- 

 cate Acacia. If the seed is 

 started early, it will produce 

 blooms in great profusion the 

 first year. 



Pkt., 15 seeds. 8 cts. 



Dear Miss Lippincott: 



I have had Beed from you for 

 the past few years and they were 

 always fine, the pansies wero very 

 fine. Miss E. F. Smith. 



Mch. 9-10. Princeton. Minn. 



