PERENNIALS AND CALIFORNIA BULBS 13 
Pompon Chrysanthemums 
All of the colors in this group 
may be planted together, but most 
people prefer beds of a single color. 
Try both and see which arrange- 
ment appeals to you. 
Baby Margaret. Golden yel- 
low; miniature. 
Celco. Bright yellow; excep- 
tionally good. 
Daisy. White, daisy-like flower. I 
Diana. Pure white. 
Golden Climax. Medium-sized 
yellow. 
Goldfinch. Gold, shaded crim- 
son. 
Illona. Rosy lavender. 
R. W. Hall. Small; double 
white flowers with yellow centers. 
Rose d'Ete. Pinkish lilac. Pro- 
duces an abundance of beautiful 
flowers. 
All above at 20 cts. each, $2 per 
doz. Ready in April 
COLUMBINES are listed under 
Aquilegias. Page 7. Pompon Chrysanthemums 
CONVOLVULUS mauritanicus is a most delightful Tufted Morning-Glory which 
never spreads or becomes a weed. The little clumps are only a few inches high and the 
deep blue flowers stay open all day. A fine border or rockery plant. 25 cts. each, $2.50 
per doz. 
CONVALLARIA majalis. See Lily-of-the-Valley. 
COREOPSIS lanceolata grandiflora is not the common annual Coreopsis, but a fine, 
strong-growing perennial. It produces a constant succession of rich yellow flowers, long 
stemmed and splendid for cutting, through a long season. I doubt if there is a better 
yellow cut-flower. Easily grown, it is a flower for everyone's garden. Sit., sun. Soil, 
any, but if rich and well worked it will well repay the trouble. Prop., seeds or plants. 
PL, September to June. Fine plants, 15 cts. each, $1.25 per doz. 
C. rosea grows a foot or two high with smooth, very slender leaves. The rose-purple 
flowers have a yellow center. Very good. 25 cts. each, $2.50 per doz. 
COTYLEDONS or Dudleyas. See Novelties. 
CYNOGLOSSUM, or Hound's Tongue. Sec Novelties. 
DAISY. See Bellis perennis, page 9 
DATURA meteloides is a strikingly beautiful flower native to central and southern 
California. Very strong, broadly spreading, and much branching stems appear each 
spring from a perennial root and throughout the summer great trumpet-shaped flowers 
like immense morning-glories appear daily in the evening. The color is white, suffused 
deeply with violet-blue and they arc very lovely. By fall the plant may be 3 feet high 
and farther across and daily covered with the fine flowers. Flowering roots, 35 cts. 
DAY LILIES. See Hemerocallis. 
DELPHINIUMS, or Perennial Larkspurs, arc among the most popular of garden 
flowers. Look at the fine illustration on page 14 and picture to yourself grand 
masses 5 to 7 feet high, with the entire gamut of fine light, medium, and dark blues rep- 
resented, together with deep sapphire and rich purple, all with centers as beautiful and 
varied. Any fine blue can be had among them, and I sell the single and double varieties. 
Each spike has a long life of beauty in the garden, and if they are cut close to the ground 
when they wane, others follow in succession, with sometimes three crops a year. Wonder- 
ful for garden massing, they are also fine for cut-flowers. They have many places in 
the garden; singly or in groups in the border or along walks or drives; in large masses 
by themselves. Among open shrubbery plantings, or combined with, we will say, 
