94 
Canterbury Bells (Cup and Saucer) 
CANTERBURY BELLS —Campanula 
Biennial. 2Vi ft. June. 
CALYCANTHEMA —Cup and Saucer. A 
place should be found in every garden for this 
old-fashioned and much prized garden plant. 
The large single blooms resemble a cup and 
saucer. Hardy biennial, flowering the second 
year from seed. Sow seed any time up to July 
15th, or if sown very early indoors, it may 
bloom the first year. Thrives best in light, 
rich soil with good drainage. 
2687 Blue. A clear shade. ..' 
2698 Alba. Pure white. Pkt. 
2709 Pink. Delicate rosy-pink. lOc 
2710 Finest Mixed. Vs oz., 30c. 
2721 
2732 
2743 
2754 
2765 
2776 
MEDIUM —Single Canterbury Bells . 
ful large bell-shaped flowers. 
Dark Blue. 
Light Blue . 
Rose . 
White . 
Single Mixed. V4 oz., 25c. 
Double Mixed. V 4 oz., 50c. 
Beauti- 
Pkt. 
lOc 
CANARY BIRD VINE —Tropaeolum 
Canariense 
Annual Climber. 15 to 20 ft. June-Oct. 
2787 A graceful vine with beautifully cut leaves and 
canary-yellow flowers. Excellent for quickly 
covering stumps, rockeries and similar places. 
Does well in shade. Very useful for the Win¬ 
ter window garden. Vi oz., 25c. . . .Pkt. 1 Oc 
CANNA —Indian Shot 
Half-Hardy Perennial. 3 to 5 ft. June to Frost. 
Usually these plants are grown from roots, but 
there is a novelty in raising them from seed. 
The seed must be soaked in warm water for 
several hours before planting. 
2876 Mixed. Vi oz., 25c 
Ca rnations © 
Deliciously Fragrant 
Annual or Biennial. 1 ft. July to Frost. 
Great favorites and becoming more and more 
popular every year because of their delicious 
fragrance and richness of colors. Sow the seed 
indoors in February or early March for plants 
to set out after all danger of frost is past. Seed 
planted in August can be wintered over in cold 
frames, then transplanted in the open ground 
in April. Carnations like a sunny location and 
will grow in any soil that is not too rich. 
Good drainage is essential. Firm, shallow 
planting, burying the roots and not the stem 
of the plant under the soil, is essential. 
Improved Giant Double— Chabaud’s 
Undoubtedly the best Carnation in existence for out¬ 
door culture and the easiest to raise. The plants are 
robust, forming ten to twenty stalks bearing huge double 
flowers rich in color and strongly clove-scented. 
2897 Blood Red 
2908 Yellow ... 
2909 Rose 
2920 Scarlet . . . 
2931 Flesh Pink 
2933 White ... 
Pkt. 
- 20c 
Any of above, Vs oz., 50c 
2935 Collection. One packet each .$1.00 
2944 Mixed. Y$ oz., 40c.Pkt. 15c 
Enfant De Nice Carnations 
A cross between Chabaud’s Giant Improved and Per¬ 
petual Carnation. The plants are sturdy, with long 
stems bearing flowers l x /i to 3 inches in diameter. This 
strain is magnificent and the last word in Carnations. 
2952 Mixed. 1/32 oz., 50c.Pkt. 25c 
Marguerite Carnations 
This class is best treated as an annual. Very popular 
with the amateur, as they begin to flower four to five 
months from sowing. 
2954 Marguerite Mixed. % oz., 40c....Pkt. lOc 
2965 Giant Marguerite. Extra large and perfect, 
flowering in a rich variety of colors, including 
yellow. y 4 oz., 50c.Pkt. 15c 
CARDINAL CLIMBER. See Cypress Vine. 
Pkt. 10c 
Improved Giant Double Carnation 
