Lupine 
MONARDA 
(Bergamot) 
DIDYMA, CAMBRIDGE SCAR- 
LET (Oswkego Tea)—Brilliant 
crimson-scarlet. 
ROSEA (Bee Balm)—Deep rose 
colored. 
VIOLACEA — Bright amaranth 
red. Plants, 25c; doz., $2.50. 
HYBRIDA MIXED—PKkt., 15c. 
MYOSOTIS 
(Forget-me-not) 
PALUSTRIS SEMPERFLORENS — 
Azure blue; fine for shady nooks. 
Plants, 25¢; doz., $2.50; sceds, 
Pkt., 10c. 
OENOTHERA 
(Evening Primrose) 
LAMARCKIANA — Spikes of 
large, bright yellow flowers. Hat. 
4 feet. Pkt., 10c. 
MACROCARPA—Dwarf. Yellow. 
Good for rock gardens. Pkt., 15c. 
FRASERI — Rich golden yellow. 
Glaucous foliage. 2 to 3 feet. 
Plants, 25c; seeds, Pkt., 10c. 
PACHYSANDRA 
(Japanese Spurge) 
TERMINALIS—A trailing plant, 
6” to 8” high, forming broad 
mats of bright, glossy green fo- 
liage. A ground cover, which will 
grow in all shady situations and 
the only plant which will thrive 
under pine trees, evergreen 
plantings, under all shrub plant- 
ings, for steep terraces, for 
dense shade under any kind of 
tree. Plants, 25c; doz., $2.00. 
POLEMONIUM 
(Jacob’s Ladder) 
REPTANS—Showy blue flowers. 
RICHARDSONI—Tal! blue. 
Plants, 25c; doz., $2.50, 
COERULEUM—Bell-shaped, blu- 
ish-purple flowers about 1” 
across. 2 feet. Plants, 25c; seeds, 
Pkt., 10c. 
areers ~ ea 
Lychnis 
PHYSOTEGIA 
(False Dragon’s Head) 
VIRGINICIA—Flowers pink, on 
stems 3 feet high. Plants, 25c¢; 
seeds, Pkt., 10c. 
CHINESE LANTERNS 
(Physalis Francheti) 
Easy to grow and becoming more 
popular each year for decorative 
purposes. The color of these lan- 
tern fruits is orange-vermilion 
and are everlasting after dying. 
Single plants produce as many as 
30 lanterns. We offer strong root 
divisions to mature the coming 
summer. Plants, 25c¢; seeds, 
Pkt., 10c. 
PARNASSIA 
(Palustris) 
Dwarf plant for damp positions 
on the rockery, or for the bog 
garden. Pure white flowers. Hot. 
6". Pkt., 25c. 
Lilies 
GROW YOUR OWN 
LILIES FROM SEED 
AURATUM PLATYPHYLLUM 
(Gold Banded Lily of Japan) — 
Ivory white, spotted with crim- 
son. Pkt., 20c. 
HENRY! (Yellow Show Lily) — 
Rich apricot yellow blooms with 
a few brown spots. 5 to 6 feet 
high. Pkt., 25c. 
FORMOSANUM (Dreom Lily) — 
Long white, trumpet-shaped 
flowers, slightly marked reddish 
brown. Pkt., 20c. 
SPECIOSUM MAGNIFICUM 
(Show Lily) —Ilvory-white, heav- 
ily suffused with rosy crimson. 
3-4 feet. Pkt., 25c. 
TENNUIFOLIUM (Coral Lily) — 
Deep scarlet blooms, petals re- 
curled. One of the earliest flow- 
ering lilies. Pkt., 15c¢. 
LILIUM REGALE — Very hardy. 
Flowers white, slightly suffused 
with pink, shading to a beauti- 
ful yellow in the center. Very 
fragrant. Pkt., 10c. 
HARDY PERENNIAL 
LUPINS 
POLYPHYLLUS — Blue, 
White. Pkt., 10c. 
SUNSHINE—Clear yellow. 1/4 oz., 
25c; Pkt., 10c. 
NEW PERENNIAL HYBRIDS — 
Great range of colors, including 
pinks, fawn, purple, rose, etc., 
deliciously scented. Pkt., 15c. 
MIXED PERENNIAL VARIETIES 
—Plants, 35c; seeds, oz., 30c; 
Pkt., 10c. 
LYCHNIS 
SHY, hardy perennials. Bloom 
he irst year from early sown 
seed. 
CHALCEDONICA (Jerusalem 
Cross) —Dense, flat heads of 
scarlet. Plants, 25c; seeds, Pkt., 
10c. 
HAAGEANA — Large heads of 
bright orange scarlet. Pkt., 10c. 
VISCARIA SPLENDENS — Dense 
tufts of evergreen foliage with 
handsome spikes of double deep 
red. 1 foot. Plants, 25¢; doz., 
$2.50. 
Rose, 
LYTHRUM 
(Rose Loosetrife) 
ROSEUM SUPERBUM — Bears 
large spikes of rose-colored flow- 
ers; 3 to 4 feet high; from July 
to September. Plants, 25c; doz., 
$2.50; seeds, Pkt., 15c. 
MERTENSIA 
VIRGINICA (Blue Bells) 
VIRGINICA—Early spring-flow- 
ering. | to 14 feet high with 
flowers fading to clear pink; one 
of the most interesting of our 
native spring flowers. Plants, 
25c; doz., $2.50. 
MATRICARIA 
GRANDIFLORA 
FL., PL. (Feverfew) 
Half-hardy perennial bearing 
double button-like, pure white 
flowers. Pkt., 10c. 
MECONOPSIS 
BAILEYII 
One of the Finest Intro- 
ductions of Recent Years 
This beautiful, blue perennial 
poppy, brought over from Tibet 
by Captain Kingdom Ward, 
throws up from its root-stock 
half a dozen leafy stems 2 to 3 
feet high, with broad, sea-green 
leaves and large four-petalled 
blooms of a glorious sky-blue 
color, with a central zone of 
golden-yellow anthers. Pkt., 35c. 
CURRIE’S SEEDS 
ARE THE BEST THAT 
UP-TO-DATE METHODS 
CAN PRODUCE 
PENTSTEMON 
Flowers of many colors on stiff, 
upright spikes 2-3 feet high. 
FINEST MIXED VARIETIES—% 
oz., 50c; Pkt., 10c. 
BARBATUS TORREY! — Bright 
scarlet. 3 to 4 feet. 
BLUE GEM—A rich blue dwarf 
compact plant. 
OVATUS—Purplish blue, 3 feet. 
Plants, 25¢; doz., $2.50. 
Pentstemon 
CURRIE BROTHERS CO., MILWAUKEE, WIS. 
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