7 CALABAZILLA GOURD—ek 12 ft. A vine with big 
silvery leaves, yellow flowers, and orange-shaped fruits, green 
with yellow splashes. Fully root-hardy north, and a rapid 
grower, making an interesting trellis or screen cover. 
Cucurbita foetidissima. Pkt. 20c. 
6 CAMELLIA JAPONICA BLEND—w(7). Clear-hued waxen 
blossoms; white, salmon, rose or cherry. Emerald, ever- 
green foliage. Splendid pot or tub plant, thriving. in sunny 
window in cool room. Sow under frames in spring or in 
heat at any time. Latest crop seed, but Camellia never gives 
perfect germination. Large, nut-like seeds, 8 for 25c; 20 for 
50c; 50 for $1.00; 100 for $1.75. 
BOOK—We can supply the illustrated book, AZALEAS AND 
CAMELLIAS, Hume, giving descriptions, propagation, care, 
at $1.75 the copy. 
CALLIRHOE PAPAVER—*crbkt(8)16. 
Longest blooming season of any perennial 
at Old Orchard. Blossoms are big cups of 
claret crimson on upcurved stems, the 
plants 30 inches across, all of a brilliant @J 
color blaze right through summer heat. 
Pkt. 20c; 1/16 oz. 35c. 
CALLIRHOE INVOLUCRATA—*ergckt 
(8-4)8. Buffalo Rose. Two months of glow- 
ing wine-crimson cups. Drought and sun 
but seem to make this hardy, drought- 
resistant trailer flame more fiercely, a fire 
of gorgeous, blinding blossoming. Rugs 
four feet across spread from center root- 
tubers. Rock garden, bedding, bank car- 
peter. Illustrated opposite. Pkt. 15c; 1/16 oz. 830c; % oz. 45¢ 
Plants, spring or fall, each 40c; 3 for $1.10; 10 for $3.10. 
4 CANARINA CAMPANULATA—ew/(6-7)50. Treasure of 
the Guanchos. Many lovely pendant bells of rose-flushed 
golden orange. Handsome large pot plant. Roots tuberous. 
Illustrated page 2. 10 seeds for 25c. 
2 CAMPYLLANTHUS SALSOLOIDES—ew (6-7)50. From the 
Canaries comes this rare semi-succulent, grown for the sprays 
of pretty, lilac-tinted white flowers. Foliage fine, fleshy. 
Good pot plant. 10 seeds for 25c. 

1 CAMPANULA or BELLFLOWER 
Great border beauties here meet with wholly enchanting 
rock garden species. The Campanulas hold up well as cut 
flowers. Easy from seed. “X” culture. ABIETINA—Wide 
violet flowers on fine stems above green foliage mats. Likes 
gravelly soil. 10 inches. Pkt. 25c. ALLIARIAEFOLIA—(38) 36. 
Clear white bells sway from the mafiy stems. Well-grown, a 
handsome plant. Pkt. 20c. BELLARDI—(8)8. One of the 
better rock garden Campanulas, with its dancing little bells, 
silvery, lavender or indigo, above green, fine-foliaged mats. 
Probably identical with Campanula caespitosa. Pkt. 20c; 
3 pkts. for 50e. BONONIENSIS—(8-5)30. Little blue-violet 
bells _are crowded in slender spikes to suggest elongated 
Hyacinths. Pkt. 15c; 1/16 oz. 35c. Plants, each 40c. CAR- 
PATICA BLUE—(2-4)12. Spreading mounds of dainty, up- 
facing cup-flowers in shades of blue. Easy. Long in bloom. 
Pkt. 15c; 1/16 oz. 40c. Plants, each 45c; 3 for $1.25. CAR- 
PATICA WHITE—Mounds set with snowy cups. Pkt. 15¢; 3 
pkts. for 40c. Plants, each 45c; 8 for $1.25. CARPATICA 
MIXED—White and varied blues. Pkt. 15c; 1/16 oz. 40c. 
COCHLEARIFOLIA ALBA—(2)6. Little, nodding white 
bells over mat foliage. An attractive, not difficult, rock garden 
species. Pkt. 25e, ELEGANS—(3)37. A pretty and graceful 
border Campanula in the Rapunculoides section. Bells of 
deep blue. Pkt. 15c. Plants, each 40c; 3 for $1.10. GAR- 
GANICA—(2-3)6. A delight, and perhaps the longest bloom- 
ing of any of the bell-flowers of the exquisite Adria series. 
Lovely, wide stars of pure mid-blue in lax, straying sprays. 
Pkt. 20c; 3 pkts. for 50c. Plants, each 60c; 3 for $1.65. 
INTERMEDIA—(3) 22. A rather dwarfer, more compact C. 
repunculoides. Very good blue bells over a long time. Pkt. 
1c. Plants, each 40c; 3 for $1.10. LACTIFLORA—(3-4) 30. 
Great domes of upfacing saucer-stars that may be white 
with faint azure suffusion, palest silvery blue, or true sky 
blue. Truly a beauty. Pkt. 15c; 3 pkts. for 40c. LATIFOLIA 
MACRANTHA— (8) 48. Rather large, flaring bells of deep 
blue-violet. A robust, branching grower and a showy peren- 
nial. Pkt. 15¢; 3 pkts. for 40c. LATIFOLIA MACRANTHA 
ALBA—tThe last with pure white bells. Pkt. 16c; 3 pkts. for 
40c. PERSICIFOLIA BLUE—(2-3)30. The likeable and 
showy Peach-leaf Bell-flower. Many big blue flower bowls. 
Pkt. lbc; 1/16 oz. 25c; %& oz. 40c. Plants, each 50c; 3 for 
$1.40. PERSICIFOLIA AULBA—Here the flowers are pure 
white. Pkt. 15c; 3 pkts. for 40c. Plants, each 55c. PERSICI- 
FOLIA MIXED—Blue and white. Pkt. 15c; 1/16 oz. 26c. PER- 
SICIFOLIA LADHAM GIANT—A strain with particularly 
large flowers, these in white and in many varied tones of 
blue, lavender, violet. Mixed. Pkt. 20c; 3 for 50c. PERSICI- 
FOLIA DOUBLE BLUE—tThe desirable 
Peach-bell in fully double form. Distinctive 
charm here. Plants only, each 55c; 3 for 
$1.50. POSCHARSKYANA—Pretty and 
graceful semi-trailing star-bell from Dal- 
matian cliffs. Blossoms of bright blue- 
violet over a long season. One of the better 
rock garden species. Pkt. 25c; 149 oz. 60e. 
Plants, each 55¢e; 3 for $1.50. PULCHER- 
RIMA—(8)30. Compared with C. rapuncu- 
loides, it is more compact, and with the | 
bells rather larger and less pendant. Blue-violet. Pkt. 15c; 
1/16 oz. 25c. Plants, each 40c; 3 for $1.10. PUNCTATA— 
(3)28. A very different and beautiful Campanula. Rugged 
towers of big, pendant bells, from translucent, creamy pink, 
through lilac, to vinous purple. Sometimes white forms ap- 
pear. Illustrated next page. Pkt. 20c; 3 pkts. for 50c. Plants, 
each 55¢c; 8 for $1.50. PYRAMIDALIS BLUE—(8-5) 84. Great 
Chimney Bell-flower. Towering stems to 6 or 7 feet, are 
lined with blue saucer-bells. A truly spectacular plant. Pkt. 
15c; 1/16 oz. 35e. PYRAMIDALIS ALBA—Like the last in 
every way save that the flowers are purest white. Pkt. 15c; 
1/16 oz. 35c. PYRAMIDALIS MIXED—Blue and white in 
mixture. Pkt. 15c; 1/16 oz. 35e. RAPUNCULOIDES—(8) 35. 

Spires of loosely swung bell-blossoms, beauty for months on 
[17] 
end. Soft blue to deep violet. Illustrated 
opposite. Pkt. 15e; 1/16 oz. 25c. Plants, 
each 40c; 3 for $1.103;) 10 for 793.15: 
RAINIERI—(2-3)5. Low, gray-green tufts 
carry particularly large, upfacing, almost 
stemless bells of waxen china-blue. Pkt. 
30c. ROTUNDIFOLIA— (8)16. Harebell or 
Bluebell of Scotland. Low showers of lumin- 
ous violet star-bells. Sun or shade. Tends to 
be ever-blooming. Pkt. 20c; 1/16 oz. 50c. 
SARMATICA—(2-3)20. A vigorous and 
good Bell-flower from stony slopes of the 
Caucasus. Many low stem-spires hung with 
soft blue to blue-violet bells, the lobes 
somewhat recurved. Pkt. 15¢; Weg oz. 35c. 
Plants, each 40c; 3 for $1.10. THESSALA 
(2-4)15. Fine-leafed, densely bushy plants 
with multitudes of slender stems that 
carry little bells of blue so tilted that they 
seem to be trying to look upward. Long in bloom. Rare. Pkt. 
35ec. TRACHELIUM—(3)35. Coventry Bells. Vigorous, showy 
border species. Mixed blue and white. Pkt. 15c. VERSI- 
COLOR—(3)30. Vigorous, hardy, Grecian species. The 
flowers, deeply cleft and spreading bells, are violet within, 
becoming lighter toward the petal tips. Pkt. 20e. VIDALI— 
z(3)84. Odd Azorean species. Pendant urn-bells, white with 
yellow circlet at base, foliage waxy. Give winter protection 
north. Pkt. 20c. OFFER 41A7—One pkt. each of the above 
offered in seed form, but omitting the Mixtures in Carpatica, 
Persicifolia and Pyramidalis, 28 kinds, for $4.50. 
CAMPANULA ROCKERY BLEND—Desirable low-growing 
kinds in wide range. Pkt. 20c; 3 pkts. for 50c. 
CANTERBURY BELLS—Here are flowers of pleasant mem- 
ories, strains and races of Campanula Medium. Monocarpic. 
ebx (2-3)30. SINGLE MIXED—tThe simplest in form, and, 
to our mind, the prettiest and most graceful, but you may 
think differently. Big fluted pitchers in blue. violet, white, 
rose and pink. Mixed. Pkt. 15c; 1/16 oz. 25¢; %& oz. 40c. 
DOUBLE MIXED—It is pitcher within pitcher, color range 
of the last. Pkt. 15c; 3 pkts. for 40c. CALYCANTHEMA— 
Each pitcher-flower has a wide saucer under it, in like 
coloring. Most popular of the Canterbury Bell strains. Fine 
mixed, including full color range. Pkt. 15¢c; 1/16 oz. 30ce. 
ANNUAL CANTERBURY BELLS—Here is a specially 
selected strain that will give flowers within six months of 
the sowing of the seed. If started early, will give a nice 
bloom-showing the first season, while the others here listed 
do not blossom until second season. Mixture of full color 
range. Pkt. 15c; 1/16 oz. 30c. 

1 AVALON ROCK GARDEN BLEND 
Seeds of the world’s finest rock garden plants are here 
near to 800 kinds of them, all hardy. It includes every 
perennial we grow that is of temperament and figure to 
neighbor pleasantly with rocks and ledges. Doubt that any- 
one has better facilities for making up such a mixture con- 
sidering the large number of rare and desirable kinds that 
we actually grow and offer. Remember, some will be quick 
germinating, others are by nature, slow. 1/32 oz. 85c; 1/16 
oz. 60c; 4% oz. $1.00; 144 oz. $1.75; 1 oz. $6.00. 
