CHRYSANTHEMUM (OR FRENCH MARGUERITES). 
Annual varieties much grown for cut flowers. The plants grow twelve to eigb- 
teen inches high and produce on long steins beautiful large flowers of many 
bright colors. They flower all summer in the garden, and make elegant pot 
plants for winter flowering. Pkt.., 100 6ceds, 3 cts. 
CHRYSANTHEMUM, (INODORUM PLENISSIMUM). 
Although a perennial, it flowers abundantly the first year from seed, each plant 
producing hundreds of beautiful, perfectly double, snow-white flowers; unsur- 
passed for bouquets. It remains in bloom all summer, and is in all respects one 
of the handsomest and most valuable of flowers. Pkt., 1 00 seeds, 4- cts. 
CHRYSANTHEMUM, (FANCY PERENNIAL). 
From the best Incurved, Pompone, Japanese, Chinese and Anemone— flowered 
varieties. Seeds sown in the hot-bed in February or March, or even April, will 
give plants that will bloom in August or September, and cannot fail, with prop- 
er care to give magnificent flowers in a wonderful variety of colors and forms. 
Pkt., 50 seeds, 8 cts. 
Mrs. Alex Bentley, Lincoln, Neb., March 7, 1899, writes:— It is with pleasure 1 send you my 
third order. Thu flowers 1 raised from your seeds the last t wo > ears were greatly admired, 
and I never failed to inform my friends that they were raised and sold by a woman. 1 wish 
you continued success. 
CAMPANULA, Canterbury Bells. 
Well known popular perennials, producing bell- 
shaped flowers of many different colors very freely 
throughout the summer. Single Mixed, Pkt., 
160 seeds, 3 cts. 
CAMPANULA, DOUBLE MIXED. 
Note —The seed saved from double flowers will 
always produce some single flowers, no matter how 
careful the selection. Pkt., 150 seeds, 4 
cts. 
Mrs. Margaret Hazel, Orlando, Fla., Sept. 26, 1899,writes: 
I have used your seeds for the last nine years in Florida 
and have haa better success with them than from any other. 
