MISS EMMA V. WHITE 



-28 — P fc - Loma. Cal. — "I am so pieced with Begonias 

 from your seeJ; also have 24 like Gloxinias and 8 

 Calceolarias only two alike." — Miss Edytha Pierce 



GYPSOPHILA "Angels Breath" 



Gypsophila Panicuiata. Also call- 

 ed "Baby's Breath." It is extensively 

 used for decorating, its mist-like sprays 

 setting off a bouquet as dainty lace does 

 a lady's dress. Hardy perennial. 13^ 

 feet. Pkt., 300 seeds, 4c. 



Double Gypsophila. New and very 

 desirable. The spray is just a little heav- 

 ier because of the double flowers, but 

 loses none of its dainty or graceful effect. 

 Hardy perennial. Pkt., 50 seeds, 8c. 



Gypsophila Annual Mixed. Sow 

 at different times throughout the season, 

 and always have a quantity to use for 

 decorating. Pkt., 500 seeds, 4c. 



FREESIA 



These beautiful plants, though gener- 

 ally grown from the bulbs, may be easily 

 raised from seed and made to bloom 

 within a year. The flowers are delicious- 

 1 y fragrant, cut well and are adapted to 

 design work. White and mixed colors. 

 Pkt., 40 seeds, 5c. 



FEVERFEW (Matricaria) 



Price, each per pkt., 4c; any 3 pkts., 10c. 



Dwarf Snowball. Charming little plants, oval in shape, 

 covered with clusters of pure white double flowers; very de- 

 sirable for bedding or for edgings. 8 in. Pkt., 200 seeds. 



Dwarf Golden Ball. A fine display is made by com- 

 bining the white and golden. Both are hardy perennials, 

 blooming the first season. Pkt., 200 seeds. 



Golden Feather. (Parthenifolium Aureum). Low 

 growing, with golden variegated foliage, used for edging3. 

 Pkt., 500 seeds. fg oz., 10c. 



Tall Snowball. One of the prettiest things I saw last 

 year was a single specimen of this tall Feverfew, 3 feet tall, 

 in bush form, which was covered for weeks with a mass of 

 double white blossoms. Hardy perennial. Pkt., 300 seeds. 



FOUR O'CLOCKS 



Four O'Clocks should be grown for the children if for no 

 other purpose, from which they may pick freely, they so en- 

 joy the bright colors and sweet odor. In a large garden they 

 may be used effectively to border walks, or as a background 

 for lower-growing plants. Mixed. 2 to 3 feet. Pkt., 25 

 seeds, 4c; 2 pkts., 7c. 



JAPANESE KUDZU VINE 



A fast-growing hardy climber. The first season it grows 

 10 feet, and after becoming established it often makes a 

 growth of 50 feet in a season. The flowers are a rosy-purple 

 and pea-shaped. In the North the top dies to the ground in 

 winter, but in the South it becomes woody. For vigorous 

 growth and fine shade it is unsurpassed, but is not hardy 

 enough for the extreme north. Pkt., 20 seeds, 5c. 



JAPANESE MAIZE, or Rainbow Corn 



As beautiful and decorative as the Dracaenas. In some 

 the leaves are variegated like those of the striped grass, in 

 others there will be broad stripes of crimson, yellow, white 

 and other rainbow colors. Nothing like it for decorative 

 purposes, either for the garden or for cutting where large 

 effects are desired, or in the center of a tropical bed, or a 

 screen against a fence, or a background in a border. 4 feet. 

 Pkt., 30 seeds, 4c. 



JAPANESE HOP 



For a rapid growing vine nothing is better than the Japan 

 Hop. The foliage is luxuriant, the leaves being smaller and 

 more delicate than those of the common hop, and curiously 

 marked with silvery and yellowish-white streaks. Pkt., 5c. 



