ANNUAL AND PERENNIAL FLOWER SEEDS 
CANDYTUFT (a) 
Valuable for masses and edging, and considered indispen- 
sable for cutting. Seed sown in April flowers in June; succes- 
sive sowings should be made at intervals. Hardy and easy to 
grow, blooming profusely. Height, 1 foot. 
Giant White Hyacinth Flowered. Very fine for cutting. 
Pkt. 10c. 
Umbellata. Mixed. Pkt. 10e. 

ANNUAL CANTERBURY BELLS 
CANTERBURY BELLS, Campanula 
Calycanthema (b) (Cup and Saucer). Perhaps the most beauti- 
ful type; distinct in form, with large bell or cup-shaped flow- 
ers surrounded at the base by a large calyx of similar color, 
the whole resembling a cup and saucer. In separate colors— 
pink; blue, white and purple. 
Finest Mixed. Pkt. 10e. 
Annual Canterbury Bells. (a) 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. 
Finest Mixed. Pkt. 15c. 

CALLIOPSIS, GOLDEN CROWN 

Carpatica). Easily grown dwarf perennial, 8-10 
ree egy ee the rock garden or front of border. Profuse 
light-blue or white, cup-shaped flowers. Summer. Pkt. 10ce. 
Peach Bells (p) (Persicifolia). An excellent border plant, 2% 
feet. Flowers large, bell-shaped, blue. Summer. Pkt. 5c. 
CARDINAL CLIMBER (ac) 
Graceful climber with cardinal-scarlet blooms 1 to 1% inches 
in diameter. Rich, glossy, dark green foliage. Grows 15 feet 
tall and is in bloom all summer. 
Ipomoea Cardinalis. Pkt. 10c. 
CARNATION, Dianthus Caryophyllus (p) 
Few flowers surpass in beauty of form or delicious fra- 
grance, 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 flow- 
ers with their thick waxy petals are spicily scented. 
Chabaud Giant. 18 inches. This variety blooms six months 
after seeding and continues throughout the summer. The 
plants, robust and erect, supply handsome, double, clove- 
scented flowers of extra large size. Pink, White, Red and 
Yellow. Pkt. lic. 
CASTOR BEAN, Ricinus (a) 
Magnificent, tall, large-leaved plants of tropical appearance, 
succeeding in a warm, sunny location. Beautiful for large 
foliage groups and background. Height, 10 to 12 feet. 
Mixed Varieties, Pkt. 10c. 
CHRYSANTHEMUM (p) 
Korean Hybrids. Single or semi-double perennial Chrysan- 
themums. Easy from seed. Culture as for other hardy mums 
Various colors mixed. Pkt. 1dc. 
CLARKIA, 
ELEGANS 

CLARKIA (a) 
An annual, flowering in July, which should be far more 
widely known. It is of easy cultivation, graceful in habit of 
growth, and lends itself as well to bedding as for cutting. 
Flowers in long racemes which open in water when cut. 
Elegans. Double. Choice mixed. Height, 2 feet. Pkt. 10ce. 
COCKSCOMB, Celosia (a) 
Very attractive and showy, somewhat tender annual, pro 
ducing massive heads in rich shades of crimson and yellow 
flowers. Should be started in hot beds and transplanted to 
rich soil after warm weather comes. Set plants a foot or more 
apart. 
Cristata. Choice mixed; height, 9 to 18 inches. Pkt. 10c. 
Plumosa (Improved Feather Type). Choice mixed: height. 2 
feet. Pkt. 10c. 
COLUMBINE, Aquilegia (p) 
These are among the most beautiful of spring and early 
summer flowers; very effective when grown in the herba- 
ceous border and groups among shrubbery. Graceful spurred 
flowers on stems 2 feet or more above the fern-like foliage. 
Mrs. Scott Elliott’s Strain. One of the finest tall strains ever 
developed, long-spurred, large flowers, in a splendid mixture 
of colors. Pkt. 10e. 

4 LET US HELP YOU PLAN YOUR FLOWER GARDEN BEFORE PLANTING TIME. 
