2 CELSIA ARCTURUS—wk(20). Cretan Beartail. Quite 
large yellow flowers with purple anthers are carried in big, 
loose racemes. 
flush of bloom. 
A handsome plant, arresting when in full 
1 CERATOSTIGMA 
Mounds of vivid blue brilliance are 
the diffuse 10-inch plants, from mid- 
’ summer well into October. Then the 
flowers fall, and the red calyces take 
over to give warm glow to cooling days. 
Chinese perennial of proved hardiness. 
Good foliage, always decorative. Ceratostigma plumbaginoides 
(syn. Plumbago Larpentiae). Illustrated opposite. Plants only, 
each 45c; 3 for $1.20. 

A rich life is one that makes each small thing yield 
its fullest value. 

6 CESTRUM—w. Winter-blooming plants of much attractive- 
ness and long season. Save in the extreme South they are 
usually handled in pots. PARQUI—Panicles of pale yellow 
flowers, exceedingly fragrant. From Chile. Pkt. 20c. NOC- 
TURNUM—Called Night-blooming Jessamine from the ex- 
ceeding night-sweetness of the creamy yellow flowers. Pkt. 
20c. AURANTIACUM—In this Guatemalan species the per- 
fumed flowers are of a rich golden yellow. Pkt. 20c. 
5 CHAENOMELES JAPONICA-—y. Dwarf Japan Quince. 
Hardy low shrub, covered in spring with a scarlet flame of 
blossoming, Later come yellow, apple-like fruits from which 
jelly may be made. Syn. Cydonia Maulei. Pkt. 15c. 
1 CHAENORRHINUM ORIGANIFOLIUM—erx(8)8. Pretty 
and hardy rock garden or edging perennial from the Pyrenees. 
Flowers like little purple Snapdragons, myriads of them, 
for months on end. Pkt. 20c; 3 pkts. for 50c. Plants, each 40c. 
2 CHAMAELAUCIUM CILIATUM—w. Geraldton Wax- 
flower. The five-lobed blossoms seem carved from pink wax. 
Fine foliage. Australia. Pot plant, north. Pkt. 20c. 
* CHARIEIS HETEROPHYLLA—erk(2)10. No Gentian could 
exceed the vivid coerulean intensities of these pretty little 
spring daisies. Pkt. 15c. 
2 CHAENOSTOMA GRANDIFLORUM — *ew(8)35. Called 
Purple Glory from the racemes of large Phlox-like flowers in 
the richest of royal purples. Near to everblooming. Excellent 
foliage. A very good pot plant, or by early starting, may be 
grown in the summer garden. Pkt. 20c. 
2 CHAENOSTOMA PHLOGIFLORUM—‘*ew(8)25. Smaller 
flowers than those of the last, but so many of them that effect 
is delightful. Blossoms usually purple, sometimes white. Semi- 
decumbent habit. Pkt. 20c. 
1 CHEIRANTHUS ALLIONI—*erbk(2)10. Many sprays of 
vivid orange flowers in late spring and summer. Sown early, 
can be brought into bloom first year. Pkt. 15c; 3 pkts. for 40c. 
1 CHEIRANTHUS GOLDEN BEDDER—Like the last in 
habit, form and behavior, but flowers are golden yellow. Pkt. 
15c; 3 pkts. for 40c. 
2 CHERRY SAGE—An easy and delightfully gay house plant 
that may be kept in bloom almost the year around. The 
flowers are of a brilliant cherry tone, the color of a ripe 
Early Richmond Cherry. Plant habit is dwarf and compact, 
with dark green foliage. A variety of Salvia microphylla that 
PS Pty suited to pot culture. Plants, each 45¢c; 3 for 
Pato: 
6 CHILOPSIS LINEARIS—k. Flowering Willow. Handsome 
shrub for mild climates with terminal racemes of Bignonia- 
like flowers of lilac with yellow lines. Pkt. 20c. 
3 CHIONODOXA—ryt(1)6. Glory of the snow. Delightful 
little bulb-flowers of earliest spring. Hardy and enduring, 
the planting increasing from year to year. LUCILIAE— 
Blossoms deep blue with milk-white centers. Pkt. 15¢; Ye oz. 
25e; % oz. 40c. LUCILIAE ALBA—Here the blossoms are 
all pure white. Pkt. 20c; 3 pkts. for 50c. LUCILIAE ROSEA 
—Flowers of soft rose, a pastel tone. Pkt. 20c; 3 pkts. for 
50c. OFFER 49A7—One pkt. each of the three for 45c. 
2 CHIRONIA BACCIFERA—*w(3)8. A lovely, pink-flowered 
“Gentian’”’ from South Africa. For months great masses of 
pure pink blossoms, these followed by multitudes of glowing 
scarlet berries. May be grown in the open ground, but also 
makes a desirable pot plant. Pkt. 20c. 
[ 20 ] 
* CHAENACTIS GLABRISCULA —k(2)10. Gold Pins. 
Rounded plants in late spring are covered with golden yellow 
flowers that in form remind a bit of smaller Scabiosas. Sow it 
early and it is an easy annual. Pkt. 15c. 
1 HARDY CHRYSANTHEMUMS 
The very name conjures beauty, and never more so than 
when it is our OLD ORCHARD GLORIES strain. It is a 
blend, founded upon crosses of the Azaleamums and the 
Koreans, but to this basis have been added seeds from named 
sorts of the hardier, brighter Morifoliums, the Rubellums, the 
delightful Arctic Hybrids, and from separate kinds again of 
the named Koreans. Many will have near-double flowers. Pink 
there will be, strawberry, coral, peach, old rose, apricot, prim- 
rose with bronze suffusion, coppery tones, maroon, mulberry, 
velvety amaranth, with yellows light to dark, buff to gold, 
bronze overlays, autumn ruddiness. Sow seeds out of doors in 
latest autumn, or at first possible moment in spring, and they 
will flower first season, living for years. Pkt. 25c; 144 oz. 50c; 
Yo oz. 90c; Ye oz. $1.50. 
OTHER HARDY CHRYSANTHEMUM STRAINS—tThese are 
good. ARCTIC HYBRIDS—Big single flowers in richly varied 
colorings. Particularly free-blooming. Extreme winter hardi- 
ness. Pkt. 20c. JESOENSE HYBRIDS—New strain that runs 
largely to widely varied pink and rose tones. Broad, low 
plants with heavy, crispy, rather glossy leaves. Pkt. 35c. 
KOREAN HYBRIDS—Flowers in many color tones, always 
with radiant lustre, single to semi-double. Fairly early; de- 
cidedly hardy. Pkt. 25c. OFFER 50A7—One pkt. each of the 
above for 70c. 
SPECIES CHRYSANTHEMUMS—kt. Fine white daisies for 
cutting or border planting. CINERARIFOLIUM — (2)25. 
Graceful white daisies over silvered leaves. Good cutter. A 
commercial source of the insecticide “‘pyrethrum.’’ Pkt. 15c; 
8 pkts. for 40ec. MAXIMUM SHASTA DAISY—(2-3)30. Enor- 
mous daisies, 4 to 5-inch diameters. Cutting, or hardy border. 
Pkt. 15c; 8 pkts. for 40c. ULIGINOSUM—(3-4)65. Giant 
Daisy. Makes big sheaf-clumps of medium size white daisies 
four to five feet high. Pkt. 20c. Plants, each 45c. ZAWADSKI 
SIBIRICUM—Big white daisies of graceful form, showing 
faint pink suffusion with age. Long lasting when cut. Pkt. 
20c. OFFER 51A7—One pkt. each of the four for 60c. 
CHRYSANTHEMUM PLANTS—Good field-grown stock. Va- 
rieties of proved winter hardiness). RUBELLUM CLARA 
CURTIS—Big salmon-pink daisies hide the plants from early 
August into October. Much-branched 18-inch plants; sheer 
mounds of bloom. Of fullest hardiness in garden, or forces 
nicely as a winter house plant. Each 45c; 3 for $1.20. KRIS- 
TINA—Perhaps best of the very hardy Arctic Daisies. Big, 
single flowers, long in the petal, of a rich and luminous 
rose. Makes a gorgeous showing. Each 45c; 3 for $1.10. 
CUSHION GROUP—Dwarf, early-flowering near-doubles, 
sometimes called Azaleamums. We offer five color varieties, 
being Pink, Yellow, Bronze, White and Red. Any one color 
each 45c or 3 for $1.20. One plant each of the five for $2.00. 
Order as OFFER 57AN7. GENERAL COLLECTION—We 
have a good assortment of other named varieties, wide color 
range. No space here for separate descriptions, but we can 
supply them in collections, each plant different, each with 
name, at 3 plants for $1.15; 5 for $1.95; 10 for $3.85. Order 
as OFFER 44AN7., 
2 VIVID CINERARIA* 
Wide clusters of brilliantly col- 
ored blossoms. No pot plant has 
| brighter flowers. Botanically Se- 
{ necio cruentus. For the “Annual 
* Cineraria”’ of the garden, see 
s Senecio arenarius. ew. 
' CINERARIA GIANT EXHIBI- 
| TION MIXED—Splendid exhibi- 
_ tion pot plant. Great flowers, to 
. 31%4-inch diameters, in many 
™ rare, intense colorings, rich selfs, 
® others with white centers. Not 
excelled by any Cineraria strain 
whatsoever. Illustrated opposite. 
| Pkt. 50c; Yog oz. $1.25; Vea oz. 
$2.25. 
aoe * CINERARIA MULTIFLORA 
NANA—Dwarf, compact plants, small in leaf, flowers around 
an inch in diameter produced in vast numbers in closely 
packed, showy clusters. There will be blues of burning bril- 
liance, with carmine, rose, white, pink, many brightly zoned. 
Much used as a window plant. Pkt. 40c. 

