CENTRANTHUS ANGUSTIFOLIUS—•ercbx(3-4)18. Flowera 
of exquisite coral rose in gracefully held clusters. Particu¬ 
larly good. Pkt. 15c. # 
CEPHALANTHUS OCCIDENTALIS—qh 8 ft. Button-bush. 
Fluffy, creamy, fragrant flower-balls, highly decorative. Good 
form and habit. Also said to be honey plant of value, (bee¬ 
keepers note.) Pkt. 6c; % oz. 20c. 
CEPHALARIA PERENNIAL 
Gigantic Scabiosa flowers, cream to soft yellow, high-held 
in striking decorative effect; that is the seeming of Cepha- 
laria. Actually the Cephalarias are easy and robust peren¬ 
nials of full hardiness. They cut well. 
CEPHALARIA ALPINA—ecbx(3)48. Scabiosa flowers of 
softest yellow. Plant with blue Campanula or Delphinium. 
Pkt. 10c; % oz. 26c. # 
CEPHALARIA CORNICULATA—ecx(6-6)45. In bloom Au¬ 
gust into November, giving good late cutting material. Flow¬ 
ers of full doubleness, soft yellow, on long stems. Sheaf- 
form plants. Pkt. 20c. # 
CEPHALARIA RADI AT A—ecbx(3)60. If I could grow but 
one Cephalaria, it would be this. Full and rather fluffy 
double flowers of soft sunlight yellow. Often proliferous. 
Pkt. 10c; % oz. 25c; % oz. 40c. # 
CEPHALARIA TATARICA — ecbx(3)80. A taller Cepha¬ 
laria alpina, splendid for backgrounds. Greatly floriferous. 
Pkt. 10c. # 
OFFER 45A8—One pkt. each of above for 40c. 
CEPHALARIA ANNUAL 
They will add pleasing variety to the annual border. Both 
good; both needed for full bloom season. 
♦CEPHALARIA SYRIACA — eock(2-3)30. A likeable an¬ 
nual, with pretty flower-heads of lucent lavender. Pkt. 10c. # 
♦CEPHALARIA TRANSYLVANICA — eocbx(4-5)45. Wide 
tangles of slender graceful branches. Rather large flowers 
of delicate blue-lilac suffusion. Pkt. 15c. # 
CERASTIUM BIEBERSTEINI—ergx(2)12. Downy, frosty 
leaf-lawns, snowed over by pure white flake-petaled flowers. 
Alps of Taurus. Pkt. 16c. # 
CERASTIUM TOMENTOSUM — ergx(2)10. Starry white 
flowers over silvery foliage. Pkt. 5c. # 
CERATOSTIGMA PLUMBAGINOIDES — rh(y) (3-6)10. 
Bushy little plants, filled for many weeks with blossoms of 
sun-dazzling blue. Seeds scarce and minute, clinging to 
the chaff, so packets will be mostly trash, but there will be 
always some seed there. Pkt. 16c. # 
CERATOTHECA TRILOBA — ♦cbfx(htw) (4)30. A stately 
beauty. Downy blossoms of cool lavender, like cornucopiae 
with flaring lobes. Blossoms freely first season if sown 
early, and may be handled as an annual north. Pkt. 15c. 
CERCIS CANADENSIS—jk(l). 30 ft. Redbud. Branches 
wreathed in rosiness before the leaves. Pkt. 10c: % oz. 
26c; 1 oz. 76c. 
♦CHAENACTIS GLABRISCULA — ocn(2)16. Gold Pins. 
Fringed yellow cushions, thrust with pins. Germinates easily 
if sown in latest autumn or early spring. Slow to sprout 
if sown late. Worth growing. Pkt. 10c. # 
CHAENORRHINUM GLAREOSUM — ♦erx( 8 ) 6 . A dainti¬ 
ness of little lilac snapdragons from June till winter. Sun- 
loving alpine from Spanish peaks. Pkt. 16c. # 
CHAENORRHINUM ORIGANIFOLIUM—♦erx( 8 ) 8 . Myriad 
baby snapdragons of deep royal purple, months of them. 
Pyrenees. Pkt. 15c. # 
CHAMAECYPARIS OBTUSA—jfh 120 ft. Japan Cypress. 
Handsome ornamental evergreen, hardy at Boston. Pkt. 10c; 
% oz. 20 c. 
CHAMAECYPARIS THYOIDES—jh 75 ft. White Cedar. 
Hardy evergreen of tall formal beauty. Pkt. 10c. # 
CHAMAEDAPHNE CALYCULATA — qmath(l)30. Shrub 
Cassandra. Horizontal sprays of pendant Lily-of-the-Valley 
bells. Give Azalea culture. Pkt. 15c. # 
CHAMAELAUCIUM UNCINATUM—htw. Geraldton Wax- 
flower. Wax-like blossoms of delicate pink, five-lobed flar¬ 
ing trumpets. Window or conservatory. Pkt. 15c. 
CHEIRANTHUS ALLIONI—♦erbx(2)16. Here is orange, 
vivid and far-glowing, for many, many weeks. Pkt. 6 c. # 
CHEIRANTHUS FRUTICULOSA —'erbfh(l-2)18. A rare, 
sub-shrubby Wallflower that winters safely in open at Phila¬ 
delphia. Showy flowers of soft orange, shaded and marked 
with mahogany. Pkt. 15c. # 
CHELIDONIUM MAJUS—ebdnstx(2)30. Many deep yellow 
flowers on bushy plants. Fine for naturalizing on banks, 
wood edges, etc. Pkt. 10c; % oz. 36c. # 
CHELIDONIUM MAJUS DOUBLE — ebstx (2-3) 24. Airy, 
bushy plants, bearing blossoms of pretty golden orange, ef¬ 
fective because of prodigal profusion, over a long period. 
Finest of the Great Celandines. Pkt. 15c. % oz. 36c. # 
CHELONE GLABRA—bnmaty(3-4)36. Tinted white turtle- 
head flowers. Rather odd. Pkt. 15c. 
CHELONE LYONI —rbnmsty(2-3)30. Pink Shell-flower. 
Oddly formed flowers, variably rose. Pkt. 10c. 
CHENOPODIUM BONUS-HENRICUS—ex30. Ancient peren¬ 
nial vegetable, of full enduring hardiness. Young shoots 
used as Asparagus, later leaves like Spinach*. Pkt. 10c. 
CHIMAPHILA MACULATA — rnatsth(2)10. Pipsissewa. 
Fragrant blossoms, pink-flushed cream, above marbled ever¬ 
green leaves. Pkt. 20c. # 
CHIONANTHUS VIRGINICA—jy(l-2)30 ft. Fringe Tree. 
Splendid racemes of long-fringed white blossoms. Graceful. 
Hardy at Philadelphia. Pkt. 10c. 
CHIONODOXA LUCILIAE—urnzy(l) 6 . Sky blue blossoms 
with milk-white centers. Pkt. 15c; % oz. 40c. # 
CHIONODOXA LUCILIAE ROSEA — Soft rose Rare. 
Pkt. 20c. 
CHIRONIA BACCIFERA—cry(htw)(8)14. Very lovely Gen¬ 
tian-cousin with blossoms of purest, richest pink. Hardiness 
undetermined. Excellent pot plant. Pkt. 25c. 
CHLOROGALUM—See Camassia. 
♦CHORIZANTHE PALMERII—ork. Dense mats, Statice- 
like flowers of delicate pink. Pkt. 10c. 
CHORIZEMA CORDATUM — htw. Racemes of brilliant 
scarlet. Window or conservatory. Slow to germinate. 
Pkt. 20c. 
CHRYSANTHEMUM—See next page. 
CHRYSOBACTRON HOOKERI—cbmh(2)36. Tall spikes of 
deep yellow lily-like flowers. Pkt. 20c. 
CHRYSOGONUM VIRGINICUM — ergsty( 8 ) 6 . Spreading 
mats of restful green, studded with golden stars from early 
June until late November. Pkt. 25c. # 
CHRYSOPSIS FALCATA—erdh(3-4)12. Ground Gold. The 
plants are draped in sheer gold for at least two months. 
Sun or shade. Pkt. 15c. # 
CHRYSOPSIS MARIANA — ecbdnh(4)26. Golden Aster. 
Large single flowers of richest yellow, like splendid Fall 
Asters. Extraordinarily good. Pkt. 10c; % oz. 36c. # 
CHRYSOPSIS VILLOSA—ecbnh(3)18. Mounded foliage of 
gray silkiness, starred with daisies of Buttercup yellow. 
Pkt. 16c. 
CICHORIUM INTYBUS — enbh(3)60. Large blossoms of 
vivid blue, strung along many slender whip-cord stems. The 
Succory of the roadsides, but nevertheless fully worth a 
place in the border. Pkt. 10c. # 
CIPURA MARTINICENSIS —uft(htw)(8)20. Rather Ti- 
gridia-like flowers, creamy white, marked with blue-brown 
spots at petal base. Good. Pkt. 20c. 
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