112 CURRIE. BROTHERS: COMPANY, MILWAUKEE, WIS. 
RUDBECKIA GOLDEN GLOW. 
and fully merits the praise 
R,. Purpurea—4 feet, August. 
centers. Each 15c; per doz 
Ss. Incana 
ticularly adapted for lines 
figures in carpet bedding 
Hach L0c} per. doz. i225... . 
SCABIOSA. 
S. Caucasica—2% feet. This 
of soft lilac blue. Hach 203s per \@oziiee seca n sti is ercie so ne egret ew eet ee 
A very useful family of succulent plants which withstand a degree of drought that most 
SEDUM—Stone Crop. 
plants would succumb to. They are therefore useful in dry situations, such as 
banks and other places where 
S. Acre—For rockwork, carpe 
S. Spectabile (Syn. Fabaria) 
September. Rosy pink. A 
able plant. Each 10c; per doz........ $1.00 
S. Sieboldii 
some variety of trailing 
6 inches, September. A hand- 
few plants will grow. 
t bedding or for shady places where grass will at 
- - $1.00 
grow, this very dwarf Sedum is excellent. Hach 10c; per d0Z...-.....5...2. 6.0. 
114 feet, 
very desir- 
habit. Fo- 
with pink, 
liage glaucous, margined 
assuming shades of red an 
autumn; flowers. bright 
pretty and showy. A splendid rock 
Plant. Each 10c; per doz.. 
SOLIDAGO—Golden 
Although the most of the Golden Rods may 
be considered too coarse and common for the 
garden, a few varieties are 
sirable and very effective among. shrubbery. 
The two we offer are excellent. 
S. Rigida—5 feet,-September. 
upright; flowers bright yellow. 
S. Sempervirens—3 feet, Sept 
handsome variety; large heads of ‘bright 
yellow flowers. 
Mach at bes sper vO Zitersene- ys.) cvecscs 
SPIRALA. 
d purple in 
pink, very 
Keron roreieteren $1.00 
Rod. 
really very de- Ss. 
Plant neat and 
ember. <A very 
SANTOLINA—Lavender Cotton. 
A very pretty dwarf, 
dense growing border plant, 
having fine feathery foliage 
of a soft and very pleasing 
silvery gray color. It is par- 
for the edging of ordinary 
flower beds. Perfectly hardy. 
Secale) 
one of the most handsome per- 
ennials we possess, and one 
which should be grown in every garden, if only for cutting purposes. Flowers are long- 
stemmed and last a long time when placed in water. The color is a charming sraae 
S. Lantana—1 foot. 
mental. 
ber. 
efrect. 
flowering, 
dance its large, showy Aster-like deep 
RUDBECKIA—Cone Flower. 
This class of plants is considered quite indispensable in the herbaceous 
or shrubbery border. All the varieties are very showy and exceedingly 
effective, either in masses or as single specimens. 
of cultivation and are absolutely hardy. 
R. Fulgida—3 feet, August and September. 
showy and very useful for cutting. 
orange-yellow flowers with dark purple centers. Hach 15c¢; per doz.$1.50 
R. “Golden Glow”’—A superb variety, which has become very popular 
They are very easy 
One of the very best; 
Produces great quantities of 
bestowed upon it. The plant grows 
6 to 7 feet in height, is strong and self-supporting, and bears long, - 
strong-stemmed, very large and very double golden-yellow flowers 
in great profusion through several weeks of midsummer. Each 
NO ret Cla OZ matesesnctocteere eo inle « sie oie ope pEniye cysemaee oieneae ee ae SET os Sree e200) 
mans exclwm pS. Wachs25C;* Peri GdOZ ccriistleteic « wlclshe lee miapele “oe ERE RCRie ey $2.50 
A remarkably showy, strong-growing 
or 
or 
is 
Suniry 
STACHYS—W oundwort. 
<p eee ee 
R. Sub-Tomentosa—5 feet, September. This variety makes a very 
handsome ornament. It branches freely and produces an abun- 
dance of clear lemon-yellow flowers with dark purple centers. 
AC HelChe PCIe OL rate ksmccere “Cire ace eee Pee en eee eee $1 
STOKESIA—Stoke’s Aster. 
Cyanea—1 foot, August and Septem- 
bv aystedoneqencveusite $1.50 blue flowers. Each 25c; per doz 
SCABLOSA- CAUCASICA, 
SPIRAEA—Goat’s Beard. 
A genus of hardy border plants of the easiest cul- 
ture, growing freely in any good soil: The taller-vari- 
eties are very effective in the shrubbery border. 
S. Willipendula—3 feet, June. Foliage dark green, 
beautifully cut and fern-like; flowers double, white, 
sometimes tinged with pink; very showy. This is a 
very handsome plant. 
S. Lobata (Queen of the Prairie)—5 feet, July. A hand- 
some variety; bears feather plumes of, rose-colored 
fragrant flowers. 
S. Palmata (Crimson Meadow Sweet)—3 feet, June. An 
exceedingly handsome plant, one of the most ‘attrac- 
tive in cultivation. The foliage is beautiful and the 
flowers are a vivid crimson, borne in great heads or 
corymbs in almost continuous succession. 
Ss. Ulmaria, Fi. Pl. (Double Meadow Sweet)—=3 feet, 
June. A beautiful and very desirable variety, with 
double. white flowers. 
Each 15¢; per doz. $1,50, 
Des IN 
a. Gr, 
SEDUM SPECTABILE, 
plant, producing abundantly its large reddish-purple flowers dur- 
ing the months of August and September. 
R. Speciosa—3 feet, September. 
Each 15¢c; per doz....$1.50 
i A very choice variety, producing 
immense quantities of handsome yellow flowers with deep purple 
$ 
A particularly valu- 
able plant for rock work or the edging 
of flower beds, its tufted, silvery-white, 
woolly foliage and stems of the same 
character rendering it highly orna- 
It bears during the summer a 
quantity of purplish flowers 
spikes, but it is on account of the 
handsome foliage it is especially 
prized. “Hachy 5G. per- dOZirismleteiersielerciore $ 
in short 
One of the most useful perennial 
plants in cultivation, either for the her- 
baceous border or for planting among 
shrubs, where it has a most charming 
It blooms at a time, too, when 
the majority of hardy plants are past 
producing in great abun- 
$2.50 
