30 



THE DINGER & CONARD COMPANY, WEST GROVE, PA. 



Pot Hydrangeas 



Excellent for pot culture for blooming indoors 

 during the winter. The foliage keeps dark green 

 throughout the winter, making them an ideal 

 decorative plant. They are hardy and used 

 very extensively for outdoor planting, dying 

 down in the winter and coming up in the spring 

 and blooming all summer. 

 Otaksa — Rich pink, changing to snow-white and 



blue. 

 Avalanche— Large corymbs of pure white flowers. 

 General de Vibraye— Very large heads of bright 



rose. 

 25c each; five for $1.00, postpaid; large specimen 

 plants from 4 to 6-inch pots, 75c each by express. 



Hardy Perennials 



Funkia (Day Lily) Subcordata Grandiflora— 



White Day Lily. Handsome spikes of large, 

 waxy-like blossoms, with an odor like that of 

 orange blossoms, and large, broad, glossy, 

 light-green foliage. One foot to 18 inches. 

 25c each. 



Funkia Aurea Variegata— Flowers purplish-lilac; 

 leaves beautiful variegated green and gold. 2 

 feet. 25c each. 

 Hibiscus Meehan's Marvel Mallow — Without ex- 

 ception the finest production among the Hardy 

 Plant line in years. They make a bush-like growth 

 from 4 to 5 feet high and 2 to 3 feet across The 

 flowers are of an enormous size, frequently 8 to 10 

 inches in diameter and ranging in color from fiery 

 crimson through various shades of red, pink and 

 white. No garden or yard complete without them 

 perfectly hardy, will thrive in any locality or kind 

 of soil and blooms continually from July imtil 

 checked by frost. Require no 

 care or protection. Price, mixed 

 colors, . Pink, Red or White, 

 strong" 2-year-old field-grown 

 roots, 75c each. 



01 





P"^ 



^H^^sIjkmK ,!3j?^lj^' ^Sh^^KI^ ^^^ 



i 





^^ 





s^^si 



IH^^^HHHIwii^ 



•h 



i 



Hydrangea Otaksa 



Yucca Filamentosa -Spanish Bayonet — A low-growing 

 evergreen plant with narrow leaves. The flower stalk 

 is from 2 to 4 feet high and rises from the center. 

 Creamj' white, bell-shaped flowers. 



Rubeckia, Golden Glow — Grows 6 to 8 feet high, 

 branching freely and bearing by the hundreds on 

 long, graceful stems exquisite double flowers of the 

 brightest golden yellow. Hardy. 25c each, postpaid. 



Spanish Iris 



Fine for cutting, as they stand 

 gentle forcing well. When planted 

 in open ground make a fine display. 

 Price 10 cts. each; $1 doz., postpaid. 

 British Queen. Large white flowers. 

 King of the Blues. One of the best 



blues. 

 King of the Yellows. Fine yellow. 

 Philomela. Very attractive shade 



of light blue. 

 Midley. Light blue. 

 Prince of Orange. Yellow and lilac. 

 Sapho. Good bronze.. 

 Walter T. Ware. Pale lemon yellow. 



German Iris 



The memory of the "Blue Flag" of the old- 

 time gardens is one ever sweet to those whose 

 lives were lived in such surroundings, and 

 while the "modern" Irises, if we may use 

 the terra, will remind one of the old days, they, 

 too, like everything else of these days, have 

 yielded to the influence of improvement, and 

 there has been evolved a race of flowers abso- 

 lutely bewildering in glory of their form and 

 color. 



Canary Bird. (Flavescens) Lovely pale yel- 

 low. 

 Darius. Yellow and lilac. 

 Honorabilis. Deep yellow; mahogany falls. 

 Florentina Alba (Silver King) Early white. 

 Ingeborg (Interregna) Immense white; extra 



early. 

 Mrs. H. Darwin. White, violet veining, rather 



dwarf. 

 Lohengrin. Foliage and flowers immense, of 

 a deep violet mauve, almost pink; a wonder- 

 ful flower. 

 Queen of May (Rosy Morn). Lovely rose lilac. 

 Madame Thibault. White, bordered rose lilac 

 —companion to Mad. Cherau, edge more 

 pinkish. 

 Cherion. Standard lilac mauve ; falls violet- 

 mauve. 

 Price, 15c each; 8 for $1.00, postpaid. 



Spanish Iris 



