Candytuft. 
Hardy Perennial, Cempervirens. 
A profuse white blooming 
hardy perennial, coming in 
flower early in the spring. 
Much used for cemeteries, 
rockeries, etc. 1 foot. 4 Pkt. 
100 Seeds, 6 Cts. 
Candytuft, Snow Queen. 
A valuable and distinct spe¬ 
cies of great beauty. It is an 
annual variety and grows very 
rapidly, quickly coming into 
bloom, remaining in full flow¬ 
er for about three moths. It 
bears but little foliage, and 
the mass of white produced 
makes it useful for borders. 
Pkt, 150 Seeds, 5 Cts. 
Candytuft, Mixed. 
All colors. Pkt. 200 Seeds. 3c, 
Clark, S. D„ Feb. 22,1906. 
Miss C. H. Lippincott, 
Minneapolis, Minn. 
Dear Miss Lippincott:—A 
year ago I sent to you for my 
pansy seeds and I was very 
much pleased with them.They 
bloomed all summer and tfl,e 
leaves were large and thrifty. 
I was especially pleased with 
your “NewRed Mixed Pansy” 
Some of them were dark and 
velvety, and nearly everyone 
who passed our home would 
* .„ . . , stop and admire them. Your 
A magnificent variety, with enormous, flattened seeds are the best 
beads of large, pure white florets. Good stems Pkt Yours truly 
< 50 Seeds. 5 Us. , Miss Edna Armstrong. 
Candytuft, Giant Empress. 
Campanula (Canterbury Bells). 
Well-known popular perennials, producing bell- 
shaped flowers of many different colors very freely 
throughout the summer. Single Mixed, Pkt. 200 
Seeds, 4 Cts. 
Campanula, Double Mixed. 
Note.—T he seed saved from double flowers will 
always produce some single flowers, do matter how 
careful the selection. Pkt. 200 Seeds, 5 Cts. 
. _ Corinth, N. Y., April 30,1906. 
Dear Mis9 Lippincott:—1 have bought seeds of 
y°ua great many years and have had some beauti¬ 
ful flowers from your seed. They always grew fine. 
Sincerely, Mrs. Fred White. 
