ANNUAL AND PERENNIAL FLOWER SEEDS 
CALLIOPSIS 
BELLIS, English Daisy 
A favorite perennial, which will stand the Winter if given the 
protection of a little litter. In bloom from eai-ly Spring until well 
on in the Summer. Seed may be sown any time from Spring until 
August. For best results, new plants should be raised from seed 
each year. 
Double Finest Mixed. Pkt. 10c. 
BLACK-EYED SUSAN (See Thunbergia) 
BLUE MARGUERITE (See Agathea) 
BRACHYCOME, Annual Cineraria 
Brilliant free-flowering annual blooming throughout the summer 
months amd suitable for beds or borders. The dainty flowers re¬ 
semble small Cinerarias. Height, 9 inches. 
Mixed. Pkt. 10c. 
CLARKIA 
CANDYTUFT 
New Sunshine Calendula, Chrysantha. Gold Medal Winner, All- 
America Selections, 1934. A lovely, friendly newcomer. A clear, 
buttercup yellow in color with loosely arranged petals, incurved at 
center and reflexed at edges, somewhat like a Chrysanthemum. 
Flowers are mounted on strong, wiry stems a foot in length; excel¬ 
lent for cutting. Pkt. 10c. 
Radio. A late English introduction, a distinct new break. Flowers 
very full, petals quilled. Color a rich glowing orange. Pkt. 10c 
Mixed Colors, per pkt. 10c 
CALIFORNIA POPPY (See Eschscholtzia) 
CALLIOPSIS, Tickseed 
Very showy and splendid subjects for garden decoration as well 
as for cutting. Sow seed where intended to bloom in early Spring; 
thin out to 6 inches apart. Cut flowers as soon as they open, as this 
prolongs the blooming season until Autumn. 
Drummondii (Golden Wave). Golden yellow, center dark, brownish 
red. Pkt. 10c. 
Tall Mixed. Pkt. 10c. 
CAMPANULA, Canterbury Bell 
Campanula Medium. One of the grandest of old-time favorites. 
These beautiful and effective hardy biennials reach a height of 
3 feet and are covered with large bell-shaped flowers during Spring 
and Summer. Sow seed in late Spring or Fall in seed beds or boxes 
and later transplant to their permanent location. 
Double Mixed. Pkt. 10c. 
BROWALLIA, Amethyst 
Favorite annual, covered with beautiful rich blue flowers during 
Summer and Autumn in the garden. Blooms freely in Winter if 
the plants are lifted in Autumn and cut back. 
Mixed. Pkt. 10c. 
CALENDULA, Scotch Marigold 
The colorful flowers make a wonderful display in the garden 
and are always admired by those who see them. Blooms freely in 
early Summer and continues into the Fall. Even though this plant 
prefers a sunny location and rather dry soil, it does well under widely 
different conditions, requiring little care to grow to perfection. 18 to 
24 inches in height. 
Campfire Improved. The color is well known, a very deep strong 
orange with a distinct scarlet sheen on the upper side of each petal. 
Blooms are flat across the top and measure at least 4 inches in 
diameter. The plants are strong growing and even in. habit, with 
exceptionally long heavy cutting stems, produced in generous 
quantity on each plant. Pkt. 15c. 
Orange Shaggy. Gold Medal, All-America Selections, 1935. One of 
the most interesting introductions is the new laciniated type. Orange 
Shaggy. Deep orange shading lighter at the center, exceedingly grace¬ 
ful and informal in appearance, it is a striking contrast to the 
formal Calendulas in general use. The plants are free flowering, neat 
and compact, bearing long stems which make the fringy petaled 
flowers equally useful in the garden or for cutting. Pkt. 10c. 
Calycanthema (Cup and Saucer). Perhaps the most beautiful type; 
distinct in form, with large bell or cup-shaped flowers surrounded 
at the bash by a large calyx of similar color, the whole resembling 
a cup and saucer. Finest Mixed. Pkt. 10c. 
Annual Canterbury Bells. Gold Medal, All-America Selections, 1933. 
We have all wished for a Canterbury Bell that would not occupy the 
ground for so long before it flowered. An annual, when planted 
from seed, loads itself with flowers in less than five months, in 
colors the same as the biennial type, including the various shades 
of blue, pink, rose, and white. By making successive plantings all 
through the early spring, we can have these lovely flowers all sum¬ 
mer and early fall. Finest Mixed. Pkt. 10c. 
CANDYTUFT, Iberis—Canary Bird Flower 
Valuable for masses and edging, and considered indispensable 
for cutting. Seed sown in April flowers in June; successive sowings 
should be made at intervals. Hardy and easy to grow, blooming 
profusely. 1 foot. 
Coronaria. Giant white Hyacinth flowered. Pkt. 10c. 
Umbellata. Mixed. Pkt. 10c. 
CARNATION, Dianthus Caryophyllus 
Few flowers surpass in beauty of form or delicious fragrance, 
the richly hued Carnation. The plants are branching but compact, 
and the handsome blossoms are produced on blue-green stems that 
are stiff but slender. The double flowers with their thick waxy 
petals are spicily scented. Mixed Colors, per pkt. 10c 
0 
UXWTX’S DWARF HYBRID DAHLIAS G llOWN FROM SEED ARE EXCELLENT 
