SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS 
65 
CAMPANULA MEDIUM CANTERBURY BELLS 
An old favorite. Blue, rose or white. 2 feet. June. 
Calycanthema 
Cup-and-Saucer Canterbury Bell. In blue, lilac, rose and 
white. 
CENTAUREA MOUNTAIN-BLUET 
Montana. July to September. 
CEPHALARIA ROUNDHEADS 
Alpina 
When fully established attains a height of 6 feet, bearing in 
June and July delicate sulphur-yellow flowers, not unlike the 
flowers of Scabiosa. 
CERASTIUM SNOW-IN-SUMMER 
Tomentosum 
A low-growing plant having silvery white foliage and pro¬ 
ducing an abundance of snow-white flowers. Especially suitable 
for rock or border purposes. 
CHELONE TURTLEHEAD 
Lyonii 
A pretty perennial growing 2 feet tall and bearing snap- 
dragon-like flowers. 
CHRYSANTHEMUMS (Hardy Garden Varieties) 
Coreanum KOREAN CHRYSANTHEMUM 
2 to 3 feet. September and October. A superb garden plant, 
coming into bloom before the first frosts. Flowers are single, 
2 to 3 inches across, white at first, acquiring a rose-pink tinge 
with age. 
Alice Howell. Orange yellow. Early. 
Barbara Cummings. Double yellow. Early. 
Brown Bessie. Pompon. Reddish bronze. 
Carrie. Light yellow. 
Early Snow. White. 
Firelight. Red. 
Glory of Seven Oaks. Large yellow. Early. 
Gypsy Girl. Red. Early. 
L’Argentuillais. Deep chestnut. Early. 
Model. Light yellow pompon. 
Mrs. Harrison. Light pink. 
Niza. Deep pink pompon. Earliest of pinks. Dwarf. 
Normandie. White, tinted blush-pink, the earliest of all. 
Oconto. Japanese. White. Large. October 15. 
October Girl. Pink. 
Old Homestead. Pink. Large. 
Ruth Hatton. Rosy pink. 
Skibo. Golden yellow. Pompon. October 20. 
Snow Clad. Pure white. 
Tennison. Large chestnut brown. 
Tints of Gold. Yellowish bronze. 
Yellow Button 
COREOPSIS Lanceolata 
Golden yellow. Flowers from June to frost time. 
Plants on this page $0.25 each, $2.50 dozen, $18.00 per 100, 
except as noted 
