Abutilon. 
Flowering Maple. 
A very popular perennial shrub, 
with bell-shaped drooping flow- 
ers, well adapted to house culture, 
easily raised from seed, and if 
sown before April, under glass, 
plants will bloom the first season. 
For winter flowering, plant in 
September. Finest mixed. 
Pkt., 30 seeds, 5 cts. 
Acrolinium, Everlasting. 
One of the most beautiful and 
valuable of the everlasting flow- 
ers, called by some "Pink 
Daisies"; very effective in bor- 
ders during the bloomi ng seasons, 
and possessing the additional ad- 
vantage of being available for 
winter decoration, for which pur- 
pose it is now extensively grown. 
The densely double flowers are 
faultless, both in shape and 
color; the flowers are somewhat 
larger than the single, and from 
the seed I offer above 75 % will 
be double. Pkt., 100 seeds, 5 cts . 
Ageratum, Imperial Dark Blue. 
A plant that blooms continuously all sum- 
mer in the garden and makes a pleasing 
contrast of color with more brilliant varie- 
ties. I offer seed of the new Imperial Dark 
Blue as the best and most showy. 
Pkt., 300 seeds, 5 cts. 
Ageratum, Dwarf White. 
Very dwarf and compact; pure white. 
Pkt., 300 seeds, 5 cts. 
Arabis Alpina. 
The pure white flowers grow so uniformly 
and thickly that it gives the effect of a sheet 
of snow. Plants perfectly hardy. The 
earliest, prettiest, spring flower. The 
spreading tufts are densely clothed with 
neat, lively green leaves and covered with 
pure white flowers of the most lovely 
effect, conspicuous at a great distance, 
especially in large masses on rockeries or 
broad edgings for park roads, having the 
advantage of braving the greatest drought 
during summer and always looking neat. 
Pkt., 400 seeds, 5 cts. 
Achillea. 
Ptar mica— (Double White Yarrow.) One 
of the best hardy white perennials in the 
list. Grows about two feet high, and from 
spring till frost is covered with heads of 
pure white double flowers. A grand plant 
for cemetery decoration. Easily grown 
from seed, flowering the first season if 
sown early. Pkt., 300 seeds, 5 cts. 
Dear Miss Lippincott: —. _ . 
/ was much pleased with seeds I received from you two years ago. The Pansies t Iioyal 
Show) were all you claimed them to be, and I still have a fine bed of them. Also Marguerite 
Carnations are doin', well. Mrs. MeUon^Geoffro ^ 
C 
