3 CALOCHORTUS 
Blossoms to five inch diameter, rarely less than two, in 
rainbow hue, often banded, blotched or embossed in contrast- 
ing color tones. They vary much in form of flower, downy 
stars, fairy lanterns, then the great Mariposas or blossome 
butterflies. Pink, rose, lavender, cream, citron, orange, yellow 
will appear. “‘yt” culture. Illustrated this page. Pkt. 20c. 
Be rich in spring days of gaining sun and rising green 
In summer days of sky-deep blue and silver shade 
In autumn days of pheasant call and ripening leaf 
In winter days of creaking snow and sunset glory. 
This is the wealth to gather and guard 
While time still stands. 
1 CALLIRHOE INVOLUCRATA—erkt(3)8. Buffalo Rose. 
Near to two months of glowing wine-crimson beauty. Drought 
and sun but seem to make this hardy, resistant trailer flame 
more fiercely, a fire of gorgeous, blinding blossoming. Rugs 
four feet across spread from each single 
center root-tuber. Rock garden, bedding, 
banks, carpeting. Pkt. 20c; Ye oz. 35c; 
1% oz. 60c. Plants, each 50c; 3 for $1.25; 
10 for $3.65; 25 for $8.00. 
1 CALLIRHOE PAPAVER — ebkt(8)16. 
Wine Cup. The blossoms are big cups of 
-claret-crimson, and they appear in con- 
tinuous succession from May until into 
November, never a pause. Not a trailer, 
but makes somewhat spreading plants to 
30 inch diameters, the flowers carried on 
slender 16-inch stems. Illustrated oppo- 
site. Pkt. 25c; 3 pkts. for 70c. 
1 CALLUNA or HEATHER 
The true HEATHER of story and song, Calluna vulgaris, 
is a fully hardy plant with fine, evergreen, always attractive, 
foliage and multitudes of pretty little flower-bells in white, 
pink or purple. Give sun and good drainage and it will thrive 
alike on good garden soils or in sandy, stony places. A 
variable species, and may show interesting new forms. ‘“‘kt’” 
culture. Pkt. 20c; %g oz. 85c; % oz. 60c. 
COPPERY HEATHER—14 inches. Calluna. Gracefully ir- 
regular mounds of feathery foliage, light green in summer, 
but as autumn cools the sprays become gold-tipped, then 
bronzed copper, and finally all is a rich coppery maroon, 
remaining so until spring when soft green resumes. Profuse 
summer flowers of rosy pink. By the way, all of the Heathers 
will stand shearing. Also any or all of them, planted a bit 
closely, will make a delightful, and different, ground cover. 
Good for edgings, too, or to fill a corner, or a space behind 
a walk. They will add distinction to the sunny rock garden, 
or to the mixed hardy border. Plants of the Coppery Heather, 
each 70c; 3 for $1.85; 10 for $5.80; 25 for $12.90. 
DWARF WHITE HEATHER—10 inches, Calluna. Dense, 
cushiony plants, deep green year around, are set with hosts 
of snowy white flower-bells in August. Fine for edging, or 
in rock garden. Plants, each 70c; 3 for $1.85; 10 for $5.80; 
265 for $12.90. 
DWARF PURPLE HEATHER—10 inches. Calluna. Rich 
green foliage all year. Compact grower. Pretty blossoms of 
rosy purple. Desirable. Plants each 70c; 3 for $1.85. 
HAMMONDI ALBA—20 inches. Calluna. Fine foliage, always 
emerald green. Irregular, fountain-like form. Pretty little 
white flowers. Particularly good for foundation plantings, or 
in the mixed hardy border. Called ‘“‘The Lucky Heather”, 
Plants, each 70c; 3 or $1.85; 10 for $5.80; 25 for $12.90. 
THE MOSSY HEATHER—The low plants grow to only some 
three inches of height, the foliage exceedingly fine, soft and 
mossy, densely packed to form low, spreading mounds of 
bright green. The flowers are of a pretty rose shade. A gem 
for the rock garden, or it may be used in dry walls. Plants, 
small pot-grown, each 75c; 3 for $2.00. 
OFFER 525AN—One plant each of the 5 Heathers, with one 
of the Spring Heath (Erica carnea), 6 in all, named, for 
$3.80. 3 of each (18 in all) for $10.00. 
[25] 
ANTHUS FLORIDUS—k. Sweet Shrub. Easy shrub 
Rititcuisteenioted flowers that have fragrance of straw- 
berries. Pkt. 15c; 44 oz. 40c. 
3 THE CAMAS LILIES 
Beautiful in flower are these 
fully hardy bulbs, in great spikes 
that remind of Eremurus, and 
have rather like decorative gar- 
den effect. The spikes are loosely 
set with big star-blossoms in de- 
lightful color variations, cream, 
to blue and purple. CAMASSIA 
CUSICKI—60 inches. Rarest and 
perhaps finest; quite certainly 
the tallest. Big flowers, from 
pale lavender and mauve, to indi- 
go and violet. Pkt. 20c. LEICHT- 
LINI—48 inches. Great stars of 
flowers, usually in blue, varied 
tones, light to dark, but some- 
times in pure or creamy white. 
Illustrated opposite. Easy. Pkt. 
15c; We oz. 30c; oz. 45c; 
y% oz. 80c. QUAMASH—25 inches. 
Biue Camas Lily. Loose spray- 
spikes of blossoms in a deep blue, 
not far from indigo. Particularly 
effective when clumps of 5 or 6 
bulbs are planted together. Pkt. 
15e; Ye oz. 25c; % oz. 40c;'% oz. 
70c. OFFER 525B—One pkt. each of the 3 for 40c. CAMAS- 
SIA BLEND—Above in mixture. Pkt. 15¢c; %& oz. 46e; 
% oz. 80c. 
CAMELLIA 
CAMELLIA JAPONICA BLEND—w(7). Clear-hued waxen 
blossoms; white, salmon, rose or cherry, single to double. 
Emerald, evergreen foliage. Splendid pot or tub plants, thriv- 
ing in a sunny window of a cool room. Sow in frames in 
spring, or under glass at any time. Latest crop seed, but 
note that Camellia never gives perfect germination. Large, 
nut-like seeds, 7 for 25c; 18 for 50c; 45 for $1.00; 100 for 
$2.00 
5 CANDYTUFT 
UMBELLATA FINEST MIXED—ebx(2-3)12. Flowers, wide- 
clustered, in soft pink, rose, cardinal, crimson, lilac, white. 
Quick to bloom. Beds, edging, rock garden. Pkt. 10c; % oz. 30e. 
UMBELLATA ROSE CARDINAL— 
A bright, glowing tone. Much used 
for bedding where vivid color is 
needed. Pkt. 10¢; %4 oz. 35c. 
GIANT HYACINTH-FLOWERED. 
Plants massively branched in can- 
delabra form, each branch a thick 
hyacinth-spike of snowiest white. 
Fine for cutting. Illustrated oppo- 
site. Pkt. 10c; \% oz. 20e; % oz. 35c; 
1 oz. $1.10. 
LITTLE PRINCE— The last in 
dainty miniature, height only to six 
inches. Delightful edger or bedder, 
or a pretty pot plant. Pkt. 15¢; 
% oz. 35ce. 
2 AN EASY EXOTIC 
It is CARICA PAPAYA, and in the North it may be grown 
as an easy, speedy large pot or tub plant, for it comes on 
quickly from seed. The plants are as decorative, as tropical 
in appearance and suggestion as a Palm, the habit of the 
plant, and the deeply cut, somewhat frond-like leaves aiding 
the decorative Palm illusion. Well-grown plants bear the 
melon-shaped papaya fruits the second year, these edible, 
highly esteemed for the table. Few exotics so curious, and 
ornamental, can be grown with such slight fuss and care. 
Pkt. 25c; 3 pkts. for 70c. 
1 PEERLESS HARDY BORDER BLEND 
Seeds of unusual and showy flowers, a blend of more than 
100 perennials that are tall, vigorous, and handsome enough 
to grace the most particular of permanent plantings. Includes 
many Fane re Winter-hardy. 4g oz. 25c; y oz. 40c; 4 oz. 
c; 1 oz. $2.70. 
