42 VESEY STREET, NEW YORK CITY 
33 
CERASTIUM. Dwarf-growing, white foliage plants, well p kt. 
adapted for edgings or for mixing with plants with dark 
foliage. 
Biebersteini. Silvery foliage. 3 2 foot.SO. 10 
Tomentosum. Very pretty; white leaves, small white 
flowers.:.25 
CINERARIA 
Williams' Extra Choice Strain. Imported in original pack- p kt. 
ages. Produces extremely fine flowers of diverse colors and 
magnificent form.$0.75 
Grandiflora Kermesina. Intense glowing, velvety dark 
crimson; double petals.50 
CHRYSANTHEMUM 
Leucanthemum hybridum (Shasta Daisy). This variety Pkt. 
is the most recent improved form and one of the finest peren¬ 
nials for permanent garden decoration.SO. 10 
Segetum grandiflorum (The Golden Marguerite). Large, 
bright yellow flowers..10 
Multicaule. Dwarf bedding 
variety 3 to 4 inches high; 
golden yellow flowers.10 
Lord Beaconsfield. Crimson 
maroon, edged and striped 
gold, brown eye, ringed yellow .10 
The Sultan. Crimson, maroon 
center; a wide gold ring.10 
W. E. Gladstone. Pure, brill¬ 
iant, rich crimson.10 
Tricolor. White, with yellow 
band. 
Eclipse. Pure golden, with a 
bright purplish scarlet ring 
and dark brown disc; very 
striking. 
Venustum. Crimson center, 
white band; lovely.05 
Mixed Single Annual Vari¬ 
eties.Oz. 50c. 
DOUBLE VARIETIES 
Coronarium. Double Yellow. 
Handsome border plant. 2 feet 
Double White. Very showy. 
2 feet. 
Mixed Double Annual Vari¬ 
eties .Oz. 50c. 
.05 
.05 
.05 
Cineraria, Williams’ 
double, white Pkt - | 
pot culture. . . .$0.10 
VARIETIES FOR POT CULTURE 
AND BOUQUETS 
Indicum fl. pi. Half-hardy 
perennial; very double. Mix¬ 
ed colors.25 
Japonicum fl. pi. Flowers of 
peculiar form and much 
beauty, combining numerous 
shades of color; very interest¬ 
ing. Half-hardy perennial.25 
Inodorum plenissimum. Dwarf-growing, 
variety; very free-flowering and beautiful for 
Frutescens grandiflorum (The Marguerite or Paris Daisy). 
Produces freely its white, star-like flowers under the most 
unfavorable conditions.10 
Comtesse de Chambord. Large yellow flowers.10 
CLEMATIS (Virgin's Bower) 
Popular, rapid-growing, climbing plants; valuable for verandas, 
trellises, etc. Pkt. 
Flammula. White, sweet-scented.S0.05 
Jackmanni Hybrids. Saved from a collection of all the richest 
and best colors. .10 
Paniculata. A remarkably beautiful variety; flowers are pure 
white, star-shaped, and deliciously fragrant.10 
CLEOME pungens (Giant Spider Plant). Very curious rose- 
colored flowers, the stamens of which look like spider legs. 
Thrives best in a sandv soil.10 I 
Extra Choice Mixed. From magnificent large-flowered 
varieties. 1^ foot.50 
Double Flowering. The flowers are perfectly double, com¬ 
prising all shades of color peculiar to the Cineraria. .50 
Maritima candidissima. Extremely handsome, silvery white 
foliage; for bedding purposes.10 
Hybrida Stellata (New Star Cineraria). This type of Cin¬ 
eraria grows to a height of 
3 to 4 feet. The plants 
branch freely and produce 
their lit t ie star-shaped flow¬ 
ers in countless numbers . . .25 
CLARKIA pulchella. Avery 
desirable annual of easy cul¬ 
ture, blooming profusely all 
Summer, and thriving well 
in any garden soil. Fine 
mixed.05 
CLIANTHUS Dampieri (Aus¬ 
tralian Glory Pea). One of 
the handsomest plants in 
cultivation; grows about 3 
feet in height, with neat, 
compound leaves and droop¬ 
ing clusters of large, rich 
scarlet, pea-shaped flowers 
3 inches in length; similar 
to the splendid blossoms 
of the coral tree, each 
flower being picturesquely 
marked with a large black 
blotch in the center.15 
COBAEA. Attains a height of 
20 to 30 feet. In sowing al¬ 
ways place seeds edgewise. 
Scandens Purple. Large, 
bell-shaped flowers.10 
Scandens alba. Pure white .10 
COLEUS. Splendid bedding 
plants, remarkable for their 
richly colored foliage. Easily 
grown from seed, which 
frequently produces new 
Extra Choice Strain and distinct varieties. 
Choicest mixture.25 
COLLINSIA. A pretty free-flowering annual, excellent for 
massing and mixed borders. Seed sown in Autumn pro¬ 
duce flowers early in Spring. Finest varieties mixed. . .05 
CONVOLVULUS. See Morning Glories, page 42. 
COCKSCOMB (Celosia crista ta) 
Highly ornamental plants: crested heads of flowers resembling 
a cockscomb. To produce fine combs the soil cannot be too rich* 
plants should be forwarded in hot-bed; showy plants may be raisea 
from seed sown in open ground in May. The oftener they are trans¬ 
planted or shifted the larger and more beautiful they grow. Pkt. 
Glasgow Prize. An improved variety, producing large 
blooms of dark crimson.$0.10 
Empress. This variety produces combs of colossal propor¬ 
tions; rich velvety crimson.10 
Japanese (Celosia Japonica). Branching variety great beauty .05 
Dwarf Mixed.05 
Collection of six separate sorts, 25c. 
For other Celosias, see page 32. 
