BALSAM, Lady Slipper (a) 
An old and popular garden flower of easy culture. Gorgeous 
masses Of brilliant:¢olored double flowers are produced in the 
greatest profusion. Height, 2 feet. 
Camellia Flowered. Finest mixed. Pkt. 10c. 
BLACK-EYED SUSAN, Thunbergia (ac) 
‘Beautiful, rapid-growing annual climber, preferring a warn, 
sunny situation; used extensively for hanging baskets, vases, 
low fences, ete. Very pretty flowers in buff, white, orange 
etc., w.th dark eyes. Height, 4 feet. ; 
Alata. Finest mixed. Pkt. 10c. 
7 BEAN (a) 
A rapid climber, fiowering profusely; grows 10 to 15 feet 
high. Edible as well as ornamental. 
Searlet Runner. Pht. 10c. 
BLUE FERN FLOWER, Nierembergia 
Purple Robe. Bronze Medal, All-America Selections, 1942, Very 
dwarf, cushion-like plant, surmounied with flowers of deep or 
violet-blue. It stays in bloom over a long period and with a 
colorful bianket of bloom. A grand border and edging sub- 
ject; about six inches tall. Pkt. 25e. 
BUTTERFLY FLOWER, Schizanthus (a) 
One of our finest hardy annuals. Of easy culture in any 
good garden soil. Showy flowers of various colors, closely 
resembling some species of Orchids. Also useful as pot plants 
for late winter and spring; for this purpose sow in autumn. 
Butterfly Mixture. Fine bright mixture, free flowering, com- 
pact pyramidal plants, 12 to 15 inches. Pkt. 10c. 
CALIFORNIA POPPY—Scee Poppy 
CALENDULA, Pot Marigold 
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. A very deep strong orange with distinct 
scarlet sheen on upper side of each petal. Blooms flat across 
top and measure 4 inches in diameter. Plants are strong grow- 
ing and even in habit. Exceptionally long heavy cutting stems 
in generous quantity on each plant. Pkt. 15ce. 
New Sunshine Calendula, Chrysantha, Gold Medal Winner, 
All-America Selections, 1934, A clear, buttercup’ yellow in color 
with loosely arranged petals, incurved at center and reflexed 
at edges. Flowers mounted on strong, wiry stems a foot in 
length; excellent for cutting. Pkt. 10c. 
Radio. Flowers hemispherical in shape with bristling quilled 
petals, rich glowing orange. Graceful and attractive. Pkt. 10c. 
Double Mixed: Pkt. 10c. 
CALLIOPSIS, Tickseed (a) 
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. 
Height, % to 2% feet. 
Golden Crown. Silver Medal, All-America Selections, 1938. An 
enlarged Drummondi. A rich orange-yellow or gold with ma- 
roon eenter. Of pleasing fragrance. Makes a good cut flower 
with 12-inch wiry stems. Pkt. 10c. 
Tall Mixed. Pkt. 10c. 
Dwarf Mixed. Pkt. 10c. 

vith 
ASTER, SUPER GIANT 

CLARKIA 
CANDYTUFT (a) 
Valuable for masses and edging, and considered indispensa- 
ble for cutting. Seed sown in April flowers in June; successive 
sowing should be made at intervals. Hardy and easy to grow. 
blooming profusely. Height, 1 foot. 
Giant White Hyacinth Flowered. Very fine for 
Pkt. 10c. 
Umbellata, Mixed. Pkt. 10c. 
CANTERBURY BELLS, Campanula 
Calycanthema (b) (Cup and Saucer). Perhaps the most beauti- 
ful type; distinct in form, with large bell or cup-shaped flowers 
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. 10c. 
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. 
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. 15c. 
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. 15c. 
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. 
CLARKIA (a) 
An annual flowering in July, which should be far more 
widely grown. 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. 10e. 
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 hotbeds 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, 8 
feet. Pkt. 10c. 
cutting. 


CALLIOPSIS, GOLDEN CROWN 




MIX SMALL FLOWER SEEDS WITH SAND WHEN 
SOWING. IT SAVES THINNING. Be 
