J. T. Lovett Co. — Hardy Herbaceous T*lants. 



PANSY. 



Large jHngliali.— Tbis lovely flower is too 



PiEONIA. 



Herbaceous.— For a brillianr display of bloom during May and June 

 there is nothing that will equal the Psonias, many of which are so vivid 

 and so profuse in bloom, that they almost dazzle ths eye. The Paeoniahag 



long been cultivated, and 

 almost as long a popular 

 flower, yet in. no class of 

 plants have there been 

 greater improvements 

 made in recent years. We 

 now have them of the 

 purest white to almost 

 black, witn all shades of 

 pink and red imaginable 

 and with abundance of 

 delightful fragrance. 

 Many, too, have flowers 

 of immense size, most 

 intensely double, and 

 produced in a profusion 

 scarcely equalled by any 

 other plant. Pseonias are 

 perfectly hardy and suc- 

 ceed in almost any soil, 

 except where water 

 stands. 2zc. 



PERENNIAL PEA. 



Scarlet,— A valuable ornamental climbing plact 

 well suited for training to trtllis, cr covering wails, 

 stumps, etc. Flowers of a beautiful clear scarlet 

 color, on long spikes, in great abundance nearly all 

 summer. 2oc. 



Wliite. — A variety of the above, with piu"e white 

 flowers instead of red. Exceedingly valuable for 

 cut flowers. 40c. 



SUNFLOWER. 



Doable Hardy or Dahlia {Helianthus mul- 



well-known to need any description. Favorites with 

 everyone, they charm with their rich and graceful 

 beauty. Our collection embraces seedlings from the 

 very finest strains in a great variety of color and 

 very large flowers. Requires piotection in win- 

 ter. 15c. 



SPIDERWORT. 



"Widow's Tears {Trader cayitia rirgiinca). j 



— Unsur- 

 passed for I 

 the deep : 

 violet blue i 

 of its soft : 

 velvety 

 flowers, 

 which are | 

 produced in ; 

 clusters of i 

 three to five 

 from M a y 

 until win- 

 ter. It grows 



a foot to two feet hiirh, the foliage resembling a ; 

 strong-growing grass. Odd, interesting, pretty. 



tiflorusfl. pi.).— Very showv and effective, attaining 

 a height of three to four feet, of comnact bushy habit 

 and literally covered with very double, rich golden 

 flowers, as large as flne Dahlias, from June until the 

 ground freezes. It surpasses all other flowers of Its 

 color and remains In good condition a long time 

 when cut. 



04) 



