* COBAEA SCANDENS—Rapid annual vine, to 15 feet. 
Showy violet bells. Pkt. 10c. 
1 CODONOPSIS MIXED—*rstx(2-3)9. Nodding, light blue 
bells, usually zoned within, buff and purple-black. Cam- 
panula cousins for the rock garden. Pkt. l5c. 
* COLEUS OLD ORCHARD—w. Grown for the decorative 
foliage, and valued for outdoor bedding, edgings, mass 
plantings, accents, or grown as a window pot plant. In 
this strain the leaves are particularly large, the colorings 
rich and dark, like old brocade. Pkt. 20c; 3 pkts. for 50c. 
* COLEUS AVALON—w. In this strain the leaves are 
somewhat smaller, but the colorings more varied and bril- 
liant. Markings of salmon, apricot, bright pink, rose, 
eoegen carmine, bronze, purple, copper. Pkt. 20c: 3 pkts. 
or 50c. 
* COLLINSIA VIOLACEA—ernstkt(1-2)6. 
Lovely little flower of earliest spring, 
white and purple markings. 
CONVOLVULUS—ek. Desirable diversities. 2 MAURI- 
TANICUS—7 inches. Not a vine. Everblooming. Deep 
blue cascades. Rock garden, porch box, hanging basket. 
Pkt. 20c. * BLUE ENSIGN—12 inches. Upright, quick, 
showy annual. Not a vine. Upfacing indigo blossoms. 
Pkt. 15ec. MAJOR—10 feet. A vine, the old-fashioned 
Morning Glory. Mixed, bright colors . Pkt. 10c. 
CLERODENDRON 
Three attractive, but very different, species. 
7 TRICHOTOMUM — ebk(4). 10 ft. Handsome, rapid- 
growing shrub with large panicles of white, Phlox-like 
flowers, these with brown-purple calyces. In autumn come 
berries of shining peacock blue. Pkt. 15c; 3 pkts. for 40c. 
2 SPECIOSISSIMUM—w. As a house plant this showy 
ornamental throws its panicles of graceful, brilliant scarlet 
blossoms pretty much year-through. Syn. fallax. 6 seeds 
for 25c. 
1 BUNGEI—In the north this behaves as a herbaceous per- 
ennial, root-hardy, making many new flowering stems 
quickly each season. A handsome plant with dense up- 
facing blossom-corymbs of bright rose-red. In cold places, 
protect roots in winter with straw or leaves. Plants only, 
each 35c; 8 for $1.00. 
4 CLIVIA FINE HYBRIDS 
Here are aristocrats of the Amaryllis family, to be grown 
as pot plants. From heavy, straplike foliage rise stout stems 
Blue-eyed Mary. 
bright blue, with 
Sow in position. Pkt. 15c. 
crowned with umbels of handsome trumpet flowers in 
colors that range from softest creamy yellow, through 
golden orange, burnt orange, salmon-tinged scarlet, to 
near-red. Leaves are symmetrically arranged, attractive 
year around. Large succulent seeds, per seed 35c; 3 seeds 
for $1.00; 8 for $2.10. 
COMMELINA (Skyflower) 
3 COELESTIS BLUE—*ebx(8)27. Blue of deep summer 
sky, flowers repeated for months. Tuberous roots, to be 
stored in sand over winter. FMlustrated page 8. Pkt. 
lic. (Tubers, each 20c; 3 for 50c). COELESTIS PURE 
WHITE—Like last in enamel white. Pkt. 1l5dc. (Tubers, 
each 20c; 3 for 50c). * CRISPA—6 inches. Quick annual, 
with butterfly-blossoms in the most intense of blues. Edg- 
ing, bedding, rock garden, porch box. Pkt. 15c; 7 oz. 30c. 
* DIFFUSA—Garden annual or good pot plant. Wavy- 
winged blossoms, sometimes pure blue; at times, rose or- 
chid. Pkt. 15e. OFFER 45A55—One pkt. each of the four 
for 50c. 
3 COOPERIA OR EVENING STAR 
Rain Lily is still another name for Cooperia pedunculata, 
a very lovely and altogether satisfactory summer-flowering 
bulb. Illustrated page 4, The large, fragrant, upfacing 
blossoms open pure white, becoming pink-suffused. Dig 
and store like Gladiolus. A new burst of bloom follows 
each summer shower. ecx(3)18. Pkt. 15¢; % oz. 40c; 4 
oz. 75c. (Bulbs, 3 for 40c; 8 for $1.00; 25 for $2.75). 
* CORAL FLOWER 
Effects of exquisite, jewel-like daintiness. Even the deep 
green, succulent foliage is decorative. Many slender, 30- 
inch stems bear little five-pointed stars of luminous rosy 
pink, these in loose, alternate clusters. Then come airy, 
long-hanging capsules, like polished coral beads, hundreds 
of them on each great glowing plume of a stem. A 
single plant may throw 380 or more of these great, bright 
plumes. Effective over a three to four month period. 
Usually grown as a garden annual, seeds sown in position, 
but makes a good house plant, too. Illustrated page 7. 
Talinum paniculatum. Pkt. 15c; 1/82 oz. 25c; yy oz. 40c. 
[ 20 ] 
ee 4 
LILIUM 
FORMOSANUM 
VERBASCUM 
PHOENICEUM 

1 CORONILLA CAPPADOCICA—ergx(2)6. Gold-spray. The 
blossoms are overlapping golden coronets. Rugs of pinnate 
foliage. Showy. Pkt. 15c. 
1 CORONILLA VARIA—ecrgx(2-3)20—Sprays of pretty 
blossoms in Cosmos pink, carried in crown-shaped clusters. 
Decorative ground cover, preventing erosion. Pkt. 10c; 4 
oz. 50c. (Plants, each 30c; 10 for $2.00; 25 for $4.00). 
4 CORYTHOLMA WARSCEWICZI—w. A rare tuberous- 
rooted house plant, distantly allied to Gloxinia nad Strep- 
tocarpus. In late spring, sprays of tubular, lipped flowers 
in orange and scarlet. Pkt. 15c. 
1 COREOPSIS 
Easy, hardy perennials of a desirable diversity. They 
eut. “kt” culture. ROSEA—(38-4)8. Little silvery rose 
daisies over ferny low turf. Pkt. 15e. SAXICOLA—(8)35. 
August Daisy. Effect of C. grandiflora, same glossy golden 
flowers, better carriage, and later and longer blooming. 
Pkt. 10c; 4% oz. 25e. TRIPTERIS—(3-4)84. Splendid, tall, 
late-flowering species. Long-rayed flowers of palest yellow, 
centered brown. Pkt. 15c; 3 pkts. 40c. (Plants, each 35c). 
VERTICILLATA—(2-3)30. Fern-Coreopsis. Finely cut foli- 
age, green to buff-roseate, with butter-yellow flowers. Good. 
Pkt. 15¢; 7s oz. 25c. (Plants each 35c). GRANDIFLORA— 
(2-3)28. Bright yellow. Recommended for wide broadcast 
naturalizing. 4% oz. 15c; 4% oz. 25e; % oz. 40c; 1 oz. 70c. 
OFFER 461A55—One pkt. each of above for 60c. 
1 DAINTY CORYDALIS 3 
Rock garden exquisites in distant reaches of the Bleeding- 
heart family. rstkt(2). *AUREA—Pretty ferny annual with 
golden flowers. Pkt. 15ec. HALLERI—10 inches. Racemes of 
fringed purple flowers over slashed foliage. Pkt. 20c. 
CHEILANTHIFOLIA—10 inches. Splendid Chinese species 
with sprays of bright yellow blossoms over fern foliage. 
Pkt. 20c. *SEMPERVIRENS ROSEA—25 inches. Airy ever- 
blooming annual for sun or light shade. Charming little 
pink blossoms with golden tips. Blue-silvered foliage. Pkt. 
15e. NOBILIS—10 inches. Well-spurred creamy flowers with 
purple dot and yellow tip, carried in dense racemes. Pkt. 
20c. OFFER 47A55—One pkt. each of above for 75c. 
“ COSMOS FOR EASY SHOW 
Little effort will here yield much, and long, bloom. 
SENSATION—Giant flowers with fluted petals, in pink, 
white, crimson. Early-blooming. Pkt. 10c; %4 oz. 85c. 
YELLOW FLARE—Showy, clear, pure yellow. Pkt. 15c; 
oz. 25c. EARLY DOUBLE CRESTED—Flowers with 
high center crests in Anemone fashion, with some that are 
fully double. Pink, white and crimson in mixture. Pkt. 15c; 
ve 0z. 25c; % oz. 40c; 4% oz. 70c. ORANGE RUFFLES— 
A rich tone of orange flowers with two or three petal- 
rows, giving a ruffled, semi-double effect. Early. Pkt. 15c; 
1, oz. 25ec. LADY LENOX—Tall, giant-flowered shell pink. 
An old sort, but still perhaps best of all. Takes long sea- 
son. Pkt. 10e. COSMOS PEERLESS MIXED—All here in 
mixture. Pkt. 10c; 1 oz. 20c: % oz. 380c. 
