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MISS EMMA V. WHITE. 
Snowball Daisy. Longfellow Daisy. 
DOUBLE DAISY (BeilisPerennis). 
The "wee, modest, crimson-tipped flower," a well known favorite. Once estab¬ 
lished, it blooms carlv In the springand is covered during the entire season with 
dainty rosy or white blossoms. Perennial, but it blooms the first year if sown early. 
Miiowlmll. A profuse bloomer, bearing extra large, very double, pure white 
blossoms. Alxmt 80 per cent will come pure white. Pkt., 5 cts. 
AjO ii follow. With its large double rose-colored flowers, this variety forms a 
splendid contrast to its companion in white. Pkt., 4 cts. 
t PARIS DAISY. 
A handsome new variety of Calendula, one of the finest of yellow flowers for 
f 1 1 uP’ ? i conf >ldcred especially aesthetic for the corsage. The plant grows to a 
height of about one foot, commences to bear early and produces until the latest 
frosts a profusion of lovely yellow blossoms. A lady, who is a great lover of flow- 
ers, says: "Your customers once knowing the Paris Daisies would never be with¬ 
out them, rhey come in every shnde of yellow to deep golden, with light centers 
and with dark, single and double, and it fs hard to tell which is the prettier. They 
are just lovely, and keep so well." Annual. Mixed, Pkt., 4 cts. 
SINGLE CACTUS DAHLIA. 
The single Dahlias have for some time been con¬ 
sidered more aesthetic than the double, but since the 
introduction of the new cactus type they are more 
popular than ever. W. C. Egan, in "Gardening” for 
Nov. 1, says: "I became interested in the type 
know'll as ‘Decorative Cactus Dahlias’, and procured 
some varieties representing about all the range of 
colors, and should they never bloom again they have 
repaid for themselves many times over in the wealth 
of bloom they have so far given." A mixture of choice 
named varieties, 5 cts 
Double Dahlia. A handsome strain of Double 
Dahlias. Will bloom first year. Mixed. 3 cts. 
