MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. 
—11— 
if 189 ^-% 
BYWA.BACB. 
CANDYTUFT (Iberis). 
Eocket, or Cmpress, Can¬ 
dy t aft. The handsomest of 
all the varieties. It bears very 
large, showy heads, one mass 
of white, sometimes six inches 
in length, splendid for floral 
designs or for cutting. Do not 
fail to try it. Pkt., 4 cts. 
(Swan River Daisy). 
An Australian plant, producing a profusion of cliarm- 
ing, Cineraria-like flowers, blue being the original color 
gorgeous plants tor the green- wild flower, but now offered in white and rose, 
.vindow decoration, remarkable . * ,e foliage is finely cut and very pretty, and the plant 
chid-like blossoms and not difli- ,s a fr 4 ce bloomer, blossoming quickly from seed. It 
cult to raise from seed. They come into flower K r °ws to a height of from six to ten inches, and is pretty 
eight months after sowing, each plant bear- *Of ,dding, pots or rustic work. Half hardy annual. 
* - - - - -ket-like flowers, curious- Mixed. Pkt., 3cts. 
CALCEOLARIA HYBRIDA. 
These are gorgeous plants for the 
house and win 
for their orchid 
ing hundreds of pocket-like flowers, curious¬ 
ly marked and spotted; colors, maroon, yel¬ 
low, crimson, etc. Pkt., 8 cts. 
Common White. The old-fashioned favorite. Pkt., £ cts. 
CANTERBURY BELLS. 
A popular perennial, two feet high, of easiest culture. 
Single, mixed. White, blue, purple and violet. Pkt., 3 cts. 
Umbellata. Beautiful lilac, carmine and crimson shades. Mixed. 
Pkt., 4 cts. 
Candytuft, mixed. A mixture of the above three varieties. Pkt., 3c. 
Iberis Gibraitrica. A hardy'perennial Candytuft, exceedingly 
showy and floriferous, very valuable for cut flowers and particularly 
adapted for florists’ use. The seed germinates readily, the plants 
blooming in the spring from fall-sown seed, or the first season if start¬ 
ed in February or March. The umbels are nearly flat, rosette-shaped, 
with the individual florets large, shading from lilac to white. To 
see it is to admire it. Pkt., 5 cts. 
Double, mixed. The double varieties are curious, but not 
so beautiful as the old-fashioned single ones. Pkt., 3 cts. 
Cnlycanthenin, “Cup and Hauccr.” A curious and 
showy variety, producing beautiful flowers, sometimes three 
inches in length, with saucers at the base measuring three and 
four inches across. Like the other varieties, they are profuse 
bloomers, a single plant bearing from loo to 200 blossoms. 
Pkt., 4 cts. 
Canterbury Bells, mixed. A mixture of the above three 
varieties. Pkt., 3 ots. 
