5 neuu enGLflnDS seeo House 
ince 1865 
FLOWER SEEDS —Annual 
CELOSIA (Continued) 
Cristata (Crested Cockscomb). Colorful border 
plants, brilliant flowers keeping well in water or 
dried for winter. 
Dwarf Mixed. 9-12 inch bushy plants. 34 oz. 
35c; pkt. 10c. 
Tall Mixed. 18-24 inches. 34 oz. 35c; pkt. 10c. 
Plumosa (Ostrich Plumes). 2-3 ft. Pyramidal 
branching plants with graceful massive plumes. 
34 oz. 30c; pkt. 10c. 
Childsi (Chinese Woolflower). 2 ft. Large flower 
heads resembling a silky wool ball. Pkt. 10c. 
CENTAUREA (Cornflower). All summer. Inter¬ 
esting plants that are great favorites because they 
are easy to grow in all soils. 
Cyanus Double (Bachelor Buttons). 2 ft. Popu¬ 
lar wherever flowers are grown. 
Blue. Double Bachelor Button. 34 oz. 40c; 
pkt. 10c. 
Mixed Double. 34 oz. 30c; pkt. 10c. 
Imperialis (Giant Sweet Sultan). 234 ft. Beau¬ 
tiful artistic-shaped, sweet scented flowers on 
long stems that last well for cutting. Mixed 
colors. 34 oz. 25c; pkt. 10c. 
Americana (Basket Flower). 3 ft. Immense thistle¬ 
like blooms of rosy-lilac. 34 oz. 25c; pkt. 10c. 
Gymnocarpa (Dusty Miller). 2 ft. Favorite for 
bedding with its finely-cut, silvery white, foliage. 
Pkt. 10c. 
CHINESE FORGET-ME-NOT (Cynoglossum). 
CHRYSANTHEMUM (Painted Daisies). July. 2-3 
ft. Showy, large daisy-like flowers in abundance 
on long stems. 
Tricolor single. Many shades. Pkt. 10c. 
Morning Star. Pale primrose with yellow eye. 
Pkt. 10c. 
Coronarium Double Mixed. Yellow and white 
shades. 34 oz. 25c; pkt. 10c. 
CLARKIA. July-October. 2 ft. Attractive flowers 
from drooping buds in rose and pink shades for 
borders and hanging baskets. 
Elegans Double Shades. 34 oz. 45c; pkt. 10c. 
Orange King. Bright orange-scarlet. 34 oz. 35c; 
pkt. 10c. 
CLEOME PUNGENS (Spider Plant). 3-5 ft. Inter¬ 
esting garden plant having peculiar four petaled 
flowers with an unusual odor. Substitute for 
shrubs. Pinkish lavender and white colors. 34 
oz. 25c; pkt. 10c. 
COBAEA SCANDENS (Cup and Saucer Vine). 30 
ft. Admirable climber with blue and white bell¬ 
shaped flowers. Plant seed edgewise. 34 oz. 45c; 
pkt. 10c. 
COCKSCOMB (Celosia). 
COLEUS. Handsome foliage plants with large leaves 
of many rich colors. Pkt. 25 c. 
CONVULVULUS (Morning Glory). Popular vines 
and bushes with brilliant flowers. 
Dwarf Morning Glory. 1 ft. Three-colored flowers 
on spreading bushes in bloom continuously. 1 oz. 
15c; pkt. 10c. 
Tall Morning Glory. 15 ft. Good climbers with 
flowers of many single colors. 1 oz. 15c; pkt. 10c. 
Cosmos Klondyke Orange Flare 
COSMOS. July until frost. Beautiful autumn flowers 
in abundance on freely branching, tall plants with 
feathery green foliage. 
Early Klondyke Orange Flare. 2-3 ft. All 
America Gold Medal Winner 1935 as the out¬ 
standing sensation of the year. Bright orange 
flowers with long stems on bushy plants with 
attractive green foliage. Blooms in less than four 
months. Pkt. 20c. 
Early Double Crested. 3 ft. About two-thirds 
perfect double flowers of good size on attractive 
bushy plants. Mixed colors. Pkt. 15c. 
Early Single Mammoth. 5 ft. Large single flowers 
on tall plants that are adapted to the New Eng¬ 
land climate as they will bloom before autumn 
frosts. Bright crimson, pink and white flowers. 
34 oz. 35c; pkt. 10c. 
CYNOGLOSSUM AMABILE BLUE (Chinese For¬ 
get-Me-Not). All summer. 18-24 in. Easy to 
grow, strong plants covered with large graceful 
sprays of sweet scented, bright blue Forget-Me- 
Not flowers. 34 oz. 35c; pkt. 10c. 
CYPRESS VINE. Ipomea Quamoclit. Midsum¬ 
mer until frost. 15 ft. Popular climber having 
delicate foliage and conspicuous scarlet and white 
star-shaped flowers in masses. 34 oz. 25c; pkt. 10c. 
DAHLIA. July until frost. 18 in. New dwarf 
varieties, blooming the first year from seed sown 
outdoors. Increasingly popular as bedding plants. 
Unwins Dwarf Giant Flowered. Semi-double 
flowers in brilliant colors on long, strong stems 
from bushy plants. Pkt. 25c. 
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