CATANANCHE - Blue Cupidone, or Love-Plant 
A native of Southern Europe, have hoary, lance-shaped leaves, and crisp, 
chaff-like, brilliant blue flowers, resembling those of the Everlasting. Is 
an attractive plant when in flower. Flowers are useful for cutting. 
Culture. This perennial requires good, ordinary soil and a dry, well 
drained, sunny position. Plant in spring, 8 inches apart. If planted in 
fall, protect lightly during winter. 
*Caerulea Three $1.45, Doz. $4.75, 100 $25.00 
Heads of pretty deep blue flowers on long stems. Profuse and excellent 
cut flowers in great quantities on 18-inch stems during July, August, 
and September. A fine plant for in front of the border. 
CENTAUREA - Perennial Bachelor Button 
Hardy perennials of easy culture and attractive appearance. Are showy 
plants in sunny borders, and useful for cut flowers. Flowers are more or 
less thistle-like. 
Culture. All will succeed in_good, ordinary soil in sunny borders. Best 
grown in groups of three. Plant in autumn or spring, 8 inches apart; 
divide and replant every third year. 
Macrocephala Three $1.25, Doz. $4.00, 100 $20.00 
Large, thistle-like, golden yellow flowers; useful for cutting and showy 
in borders. July and August. 3'¥2 feet high. Very easily grown on 
any soil. 
Montana Three $1.25, Doz. $4.00, 100 $20.00 
(Perennial Cornflower.) Grows 2 feet high, bearing large, violet-blue 
flowers from July to September. Showy and of easy culture. 
CERASTIUM - Chickweed 
Low-growing perennials, suitable for forming edgings to beds or borders, 
or for bold masses in the rock garden. 
Culture. Ordinary soil and a sunny position. Plant in autumn or spring, 
10 to 12 inches apart. 
*Tomentosum Three $1.45, Doz. $4.75, 100 $25.00 
(Snow-in-Summer.) A low-growing plant having silvery white foliage, 
and producing an abundance of snow-white flowers in May. Especially 
suitable for covering big patches in the rock garden or covering big 
stones. 
CERATOSTIGMA (See Plumbago Larpentae). 
CIMICIFUGA - Snakeroot 
Handsome, herbaceous perennials. They have large, palmlike leaves, 
and small flowers borne in feathery racemes. 
Culture. Grow in ordinary moist soil in colonies of six or more, in par- 
tially shaded borders or in open woods. Plant in autumn or spring, 8 to 
12 inches apart. 
Racemosa Three $1.25, Doz. $4.00, 100 $20.00 
Handsome shade-loving plant, bearing in July and August spikes of 
pure white flowers, 4 to 6 feet high; well suited for planting at the 
back of border, or for naturalizing at the edge of the woods. 
Double Shasta Daisy, Mount Shasta 

COREOPSIS - Tickseed 
A useful and attractive herbaceous perennial, both for border and cut 
flowers. They are of easy culture, and produce their golden yellow 
flowers in profusion throughout the summer. 
Culture. All require a well-drained, medium soil. They also need a full, 
sunny position. Plant in autumn or early spring, 10 to 12 inches apart. 
Grandiflora Three $1.25, Doz. $4.00, 100 $20.00 
An improved variety with large bright yellow flowers; one of the best 
hardy plants. Excellent for cut flowers all summer. 
Chrysanthemum Maximum 
Shasta Daisy 
Hardy perennials of easy culture, and especially noteworthy for their 
freedom in flowering. There are two distinct types of this genus. One 
is the Shasta Daisy, which bears large, white flowers on long stems, and 
is, therefore, invaluable for cutting, and the other is the Leucanthemum, 
the Daisy of our meadows. 
Culture. The Shasta Daisies require a deep, rich soil. They must have a 
sunny position. They should be planted 1 foot apart. It is advisable to 
lift and divide the root stocks every alternate year, then the plants will 
be more compact in growth and also yield much finer flowers than if 
left undisturbed. 
Alaska Three $1.45, Doz. $4.75, 100 $25.00 
Handsome plant, with large, glistening white blossoms in June and July. 
Mayfield Giant Each 65c, Three $1.75, Doz. $5.50 
A lovely, strong growing and free-flowering Shasta Daisy of recent in- 
troduction. If old flowers are removed when faded this variety will bloom 
throughout the summer. True form grown from cuttings. 
Phyllis Elliott Each 60c, Three $1.50, Doz. $5.00 
A large daintily frilled Shasta Daisy which grows about 2 feet tall. The 
flowers are formed by a triple row of narrow frilled petals, flared and 
laciniated at the tip, and are about 314 inches across. Excellent for the 
hardy border and makes a dainty cut flower. 
Double Shasta Daisy 
Mount Shasta Each 65c, Three $1.75, Doz. $6.50 
The pure white fully double flowers have a high crested cen- 
ter and average four inches across or more. A double row of 
overlapping guard petals enhance the beauty of this fine 
double Daisy. The flowers come singly on stiff 24-inch stems 
from spring until frost. Especially fine for cutting. Mount 
Shasta in our opinion is a top notch plant, a healthy vigorous 
grower and a great improvement over Esther Reed which 
we have discontinued. 

CHRYSANTHEMUM LEUCANTHEMUM 
These are the cultivated forms of the very hardy small field Daisies. 
Noted particularly for their early as well as profuse flowering. 
White Swan (Double Daisy) Three $1.50, Doz. $5.00 
This Daisy is also known as the Double White Memorial Day Daisy. The 
two most popular types of Shasta Daisy for garden use are the Max- 
imum, large flowered, and Leucanthemum, the small flowered form. 
White Swan is a very fine small flowered double variety. Its blooms are 
somewhat larger than Pyrethrums; pure white and fully double, excel- 
lent for cutting and most attractive in the garden. Twenty to thirty 
flowers on 24- to 30-inch stems in bloom Memorial Day. 
Hardy plants are sold in minimum units of three 
unless an each price is quoted. 

[28] Cypripedium Spectabile 

