4 o J. T. LOVETT, LITTLE SILVER, N. J. 



SANTOLINA INCANA. lavender cotton. SPIRAEA, meadow sweet. 



Aruncus. Goat's Beard. 



Of dwarf habit, forming dense tufts of 

 dainty silvery-gray foliage. It is evergreen 

 r~d very hardy. Especially valuable for 

 tc ^ng walks, etc., and for rock-work, and is 

 ii. :.ca used in carpet bedding. 



Each 10c; doz. $1.00; 100, $5.00. 



SEDUM. Stone Crop - 

 Japonicum variegatum. — Of strong erect 

 growth with large oval smooth glaucous 

 leaves, broadly marked and blotched with 

 creamy yellow. Especially valuable for rock 

 planting. 



Maximum. Great Stone Crop. — A robust 

 plant 15 inches high with handsome pale 

 green leaves and broad clusters of greenish 

 yellow flowers in summer and autumn. 



Sarmentosum carneum (Cameum variegatum)- 

 — A low dense growing plant with a mass of 

 small evergreen leaves marked and striped 

 with creamy white. Valuable for carpeting, 

 edging and rock planting. 



Sieboldii. 9 in. Branches purplish with 

 bluish green leaves margined with pink, in 

 whorls. Pink flowers in August; of semi- 

 trailing habit and evergreen. Especially val- 

 uable for rockeries. 



Sedum spectabilis. 

 Spectabilis. Showy Sedum.. 18 in. Of erect 

 habit and the finest of the Sedums. Large 

 oval, light green, succulent leaves and a pro- 

 fusion of broad heads of showy rosy pink 

 flowers in late summer and autumn. One of 

 the few plants of dwarf habit that flowers 

 late in the season. (See cut). 



Each 12c; doz. $1.25; 100, $8.00. 



Exceedingly grace- 

 ful with attrac- 

 tive pale green 

 pinnate foliage 

 and tall stems, 

 surmounted with 

 feathery panicles 

 of small, creamy 

 white flowers in 

 V July and August. 

 Especially useful 

 for planting with 

 shrubbery. 



Japonica. See 



Astilbe, page 16. 



Japonica. Glad- 

 stone. — See As- 

 tilbe, page 16. 



Filipendula fl. pi. Double-flowered Dropwort. 

 A beautiful 

 dwarf plant and 

 an old favorite. 

 Its graceful, 

 pretty fern- 

 like foliage of 

 deep green is 

 exceedingly at- 

 tractive, and 

 the stems sup- 

 port beautiful 

 heads of double 

 white flowers 

 with a creamy 

 tinge, in great 

 p r o fusion 

 throughout the 

 summer. Excellent for cutting. 



Palmata. Crimson Meadow Sweet. — Grows 

 three feet high and produces broad corymbs 

 of crimson purple flowers, hung on purple 

 red stems, in profusion during June and July. 

 A superb variety. 



Palmata elegans. — Similar to the preceding 

 but with silvery-pink flowers. 



Sinensis. — See Astilbe, page 16. 



Ulmaria fl. pi. Double-flowered Meadow 

 Sweet. A plant one to two feet high with 

 handsome foliage and large graceful panicles 

 of double white flowers. 



Ulmaria var. — Foliage with variegations of 

 bright yellow either side of the midrib of each 

 leaf in an unique and charming manner. 



Each 15c ; doz. $1.50; 100, $10.00. 



SOLIDAGO. Golden Rod. 



Tennifolia. — There are a great many species 

 and varieties of the Goden Rod, which are 

 a good deal alike. As S. tennifolia is much 

 the best, I have discarded the others. It at- 

 tains a height of two to three feet with 

 spreading branches; stems slender with nar- 

 row leaves, and surmounted with long, grace- 

 ful flower heads of bright golden-yellow — 

 both airy and graceful — during August and 

 September. Succeeds everywhere. 



Each 10c; doz. $1.00; 100, $6.00. 



