SPRING CATALOGUE OF SEEDS* BULBS AND PLANTS FOR 1901. 
49 
C^rysai(tIie!i)iJii)Stora) Petrel 
This is a hardy perennial, with finely cut, fern-like 
foliage and dwarf growth. It blooms at all times of the year 
S kept in pots, and out of doors, until after hard frosts have 
killed almost everything else. It is a very profuse bloomer, 
and the pretty, rosette-iike flowers are of pure white, very 
'large and double. It blooms early the first year from seed, 
and makes a fine plant for both summer and winter . 10 
Gapary gird ploWer —(Climber). 
A dainty vine with beautiful cut leaves and pretty, den¬ 
tate flowers of a clear canary yellow. From the color of its 
'blossoms, and also from a fancied resemblance of their 
shape to a bird with wings expanded, the plant obtains its 
common name. A pretty vine for the window or for a shel- 
.tered location out of doors. . .. 5 
CANARY 
biro 
VINE. 
G a IXf p ai) b 1 a— (Perennial), 
Utlful nla/nfa /O^ x> x ^, 
plants ’ known as Canterbury Bells. Large bell- 
whjteSnb®^A v a r5rchee J f . ul and attractive. Colors, blue, 
ihin Y se 1 od I 11 open ground, cover lightly and 
OoabiP M^vJtYY ul . twGlvo inches apart, 
rouble, Mixed Colors — A fine strain . 5 
Clitoria Ternalea. 
CLITORIA. 
A splendid perennial 
, (shrubby plant which is suit¬ 
able for pots or the garden, 
and which blooms freely the 
first season from seed.Plants 
grow in a neat, bushy form, 
with handsome foliage and 
an abundance of large, pen¬ 
dulous blossoms,shaped like 
a Oentrosema, and of a dark, 
rich indigo blue color. A 
very fine plant indeed, and 
one that is perfectly hardy 
in the open ground, bloom¬ 
ing finely year after year. 
It is also a good plant for 
. . window culture, blooming 
with ease and freedom, and 
always attractive. 5 
CENTEOSEMA GRANDIELOKA. 
Ceptroseipa Grapdiflora. 
{Climber.) 
This new vine has come to stay. It is easy to grow. 
QuickTo bloom, beautiful in flower and leaf, and is a hardy 
perennial, lasting for years. It will flower the first season 
from seed, and autumn frosts will find it still in bloom. It is 
a low, graceful climber, growing only six to eight feet high, 
which makes it far more suitable for a low trellis or lattice 
work, or to train around a door or window in summer, than 
a taller, larger-leaved vine would be, and its masses of large, 
inverted, pea-shaped blossoms, two inches or more across, 
and borne in clusters of four to eight flowers together, are 
very showy and pleasing. Fill a small vase with its dainty, 
bright flowers and foliage alone, and see how lovely they are 
for cutting. In color they range from rosy violet and reddish 
purple, with exquisite feathering or bordering of pure white 
to pure snow white. The rosy violet shades are the most 
common, but as the buds and the back of the flowers of the 
dark varieties are pure white, each vine has the appearance 
of bearing different colored flowers at once. The winning 
way in which the flowers look up at one has won them the 
fanciful name of Look-at-me Yine. Per pkt. 
Mixed— All colors.. .. . ... ,l€ 
COBiEA SCANDENS. 
Gobasp—(Climber). 
One of the finest of all climbers, equally good for out-of- 
doors or for house culture. Pretty foliage and large bell- 
shaped flowers that open a clear green, but turn to a lovely 
purplish blue, i Plant seed edgewise in moist but not wet 
. soil *, cover to prevent evaporation and do not water again 
unless soil becomes very dry. When seedlings appear water 
with great moderation until out of the seed leaf. 
Scandens — Fine bluish purple.. 5 
