LOVETT'S NURSERY, LITTLE SILVER, N. J. 



Hardy Perennials 



All varieties (unless otherwise noted), each, 20c; 

 dozen, ^2.00; 100, $14.00. 



SEDUM (Stonecrop) 



Indispensable plants for the rockery. 

 Acre (Golden Moss) — 4 inches. Green foliage 

 and bright yellow flowers. 

 Album — Very vigorous. 4 to 6 inches. 

 Spectabilis "Brilliant" — An improved variety. 

 Showy red flowers produced in large flat clusters. 

 iVz to 2 feet. 



Sarmentosum — A pretty trailing variety. Yel- 

 low flowers during July. 



Sieboldi — 5 inches. The rarest of the family, 

 with erect, bluish-green foliage. Each leaf is 

 edged pink. Pink flowers in clusters. 



STATICE 



Ladfolia (Sea Lavender) — 12 to 18 inches. Great 

 branching heads of tiny lavender blue flowers. 



STOKESIA (Cornflower Aster) 

 Beautiful flowers like huge, mist-threaded asters. 

 Cyanea — 18 to 24 inches. July-October. Laven- 

 der-blue flowers of great charm. Illustrated on 

 page 26. 



Cyanea Alba — White form of above. 



SWEET WILLIAM 

 Dianthus Barbatus — The old favorite, with its 

 ringed appearance and prominent "eye." We 

 can supply them in separate colors, viz: Pink, 

 Red and White, also Mixed Colors. 



TRITOMA (Red Hot Poker) 

 Pfitzeri — Blooms freely, from August to October, 

 with spikes 3 to 4 feet high, of a glowing or- 

 ange scarlet. Hardy with protection. Each, 25c; 

 dozen, $2.50; 100, $17.50. 



VIOLA JERSEY GEM 

 Larger and Richer in Color 



ICELAND POPPY 

 Charming Cup Shaped Flowers on Slender Leafless Stems 



VALERIANA 

 Officinalis (Hardy Garden Heliotrope) — Showy 

 heads of small pink flowers, with the wonderful 

 fragrance of heliotrope. 



VERONICA 

 Tall spikes of blue flowers, excellent for bor- 

 der or rock garden. 



Amethystina — Amethyst-blue flowers on short 

 spikes. 



Spicata — 1 to 2 feet. June. Deep violet-blue 

 flowers. Each 25c; dozen, $2.50. 



VIOLA (Violet) 

 Double Russian — Large flowers of very dark blue, 

 in early spring. Profuse grower; very fragrant. 

 Each, 35c; dozen, $3.50. 



Gov. Herrick — Undoubtedly the best of the 

 single flowered varieties for growing out-of-doors. 

 JERSEY GEM — Undoubtedly the most valuable 

 bedding Viola yet introduced which is perfectly 

 suited to our climatic conditions, and which will 

 succeed in any good garden soil in a sunny 

 position, blooming practically without a break 

 from May to the end of the season. The plant 

 is of compact, sturdy habit of growth, its flow- 

 ers pure violet, without the slightest shading, and 

 borne on good stems about six inches long, mak- 

 ing it a most desirable plant for the border. 

 Each, 25c; dozen, $2.50. 



