CHRYSANTHEMUM (OR FRENCH MARGUERITES). 
Annual varieties much grown for cut flowers. The plants grow twolvo to eigh¬ 
teen inches high and produco on long stems beautiful largo flowers of many 
bright colors. They flower all summer in the garden, and mako elegant pot 
plants for winter flowering. Pkt., 100 seeds, 3 cts. 
CHRYSANTHEMUM, (INODORUM PLENISSIMUM). 
Although a perennial, it flowors abundantly the first year from seed, each plant 
producing hundreds of beautiful, perfectly double, snow-whito flowors; unsur¬ 
passed for bouquets. It remains in bloom all summer, and is in all rospocts ono 
of the handsomest and most valuable of flowors. Pkt., 100 seods, 4 ots. 
CHRYSANTHEMUM, (FANCY PERENNIAL). 
From the best Incurved, Pompono, Japanese, Chinese and Anemone—flowered 
varieties. Seeds sown in the hot-bed in February or March, or ovon April, will 
give plants that will bloom in August or Sopteinbor, and cannot fail, with prop¬ 
er care togivo magnificont flowors in a wonderful varioty of colors and forms, 
Pkt., 50 seeds, 8 cts. 
Mrs. Alex Bentley, Lincoln, Neb., March 7,1899, writes?—It in with ploosure 1 Bend you my 
third order. The flower* I raised from your needs the luHt two joarn wero Kreatly admired, 
and I never failed to inform my friends that they were rolsed and sold by a woman. 1 wish 
- ou continued success, 
CAMPANULA, CANTERBURY BELLS. 
Well known popular noronnials, producing boll- 
shaped flowors of many aifforont colors vory frooly 
throughout tho summor. Single Mlxod, Pkt., 
150 soods, 3 ets. 
CAMPANULA, DOUBLE MIXED. 
Note —Tho sood savod from doublo flowors will 
always produco somo single flowors, no mnttor how 
careful tho soloctlon. Pkt., 150 soeds, 4 
ots. 
Mrs. Margaret TInzel, Orlando. Fla., Sept. 20,1899, writes: 
I have UBed your neodH for the InHt nine years in Florida 
and have had better success with them than from any other* 
