Depend ai>l e Flowrer >$e e cls 
Chrysanthemum—Eastern Star. Beautiful large single yel¬ 
low flowers with deeper yellow center. Fine for cutting. 
Chrysanthemum, Single. Not the flowers produced in late 
fall by florists. Blooms are of the daisy type. Fine for bed 
massing and cut flowers. 
Clarkia Double. Hardy annuals with brilliant and beautiful 
rose, white and purple flowers. Sow early as possible in 
Spring. iy 2 to 2 feet high. 
Coreopsis, Lane. Grand. An excellent perennial garden plant 
with large, showy, bright yellow flowers, produced in abun¬ 
dance from June to frost. Lasting and beautiful for cut 
flowers. Grows about 30 inches. 
Cosmidium. A beauti¬ 
ful annual growing 1 y 2 
to 2 feet high. The 
flower heads are 1 y 2 
inches in diameter car¬ 
ried on long stems. 
Golden yellow with cir¬ 
cle of orange around 
disc. Bloom all summer. 
Cypress Vine. One of the most 
popular vines with delicate fern¬ 
like foliage and masses of beautiful, small starshaped flow¬ 
ers. Suitable for porches and window boxes. 
Marigold 
Cosmos Extra Early. 
Cosmos is the showiest 
of our late summer and 
autumn blooming an¬ 
nuals. Its graceful 
flowers borne on long 
stems, rising above the 
feathery foliage are 
very desirable forhome 
or church decoration, lasting a 
week or more in water. It is a very 
prolific bloomer and if the plants 
are given enough space to develop 
well, will branch freely, every 
shoot being covered with a mass 
of lovely flowers. Crimson, white 
and rose. Mixed colors. 
Delphinium, Perennial. Tall sorts producing long stalks 
with beautiful, deeply cut, bright green leaves and long flow¬ 
er spikes. Excellent for backgrounds. A mixture of colors. 
Eschscholtzia or California Poppy. A very attractive annual 
for massing, beds or edgings, profuse flowering, with fine-cut 
foliage. Mixed shades of yellow. 
Evening Scented Stock. (Matthiola Bicornis.) A plant growing 
about 15 inches, and having purple flowers which in the eve¬ 
ning and after a shower emit a delightful perfume. 
Everlastings—Heliehrysum. Also called Straw Flower. Large 
double daisy like flowers with large center, and stiff over¬ 
lapping petals. Several bright colors. Desirable for dried 
bouquets for winter use. 
Everlastings—Globe Amaranth. Has handsome, small globu¬ 
lar flower heads. When cut and dried they retain their beauty 
throughout the winter. 
Forget-me-not (Myosotis). A favorite old fashioned flower. 
Bears a profusion of dainty blue five petalled blossoms. Useful 
in planting among early flowering bulbs or in borders. 
Four O’Clock or Marvel of Peru. A handsome, free-flower¬ 
ing garden favorite, which succeeds everywhere. Give each 
plant 12 to 18 inches of room. Fine mixed colors. 
Gaillardia, Grand. A very showy perennial growing 2 feet, 
bearing a profusion of long stemmed flowers in combinations 
of yellow and scarlet. 
Gaillardia. Annual. Very showy bloomer all summer until 
frost. Flowers large and brilliant red and yellow. Grows 2 to 
3 feet. 
Godetia. Easily grown, hardy annual, producing an abun¬ 
dance of cup shaped flowers with petals of satin like texture. 
Excellent for beds or borders. About 1 foot high. 
Gourds. A mixed assortment of nine varieties. Excellent for 
a vine screen. The dried gourds are interesting and orna¬ 
mental. 
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