LOVETT'S NURSERY, LITTLE SILVER, NJ.— HARDY PERENNIALS 



3.3 



CIMICIFUGA 

 Simplex. New. 4 ft. — Dense spikes of pure 

 white flowers in September. Fine for cutting. 

 Succeeds best in partial shade. Each, 25c.; 

 dozen. $2.50. 



CLEMATIS 



Davidiana. 2 to 3 ft. — Produces large clus- 

 ters of beautiful fragrant hyacinth-like tlowers 

 of deep celestial blue from mid-July to late 

 September. Each, 25c.: dozen, S2.50. 



CONVALLARIA. Lily-of-the- 

 Valley. 



This universal favorite scarcely needs de- 

 scription. Succeeds best in partial shade, in 

 rich soil with plenty of manure. We ofter 

 American-grown plants of the giant-fiowered 

 variet}', 8 to 10 in. 



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



Strong clumps, each, 30c.; dozen, $3.00; 100. 

 $22.00. 



COREOPSIS 



Lanceolata. GOLDEN WAVE. 2 to 3 ft.— 

 Probably the best of all hardy yellow flowers 

 for massing. Blooms incessantly from June 

 until frost with large, daisy-like flowers on 

 slender, wirv stems. Each, 15c.: dozen. $1.50: 

 100, $10.00. 



DAISY. Hardy Daisy 



Shasta Daisy. 9 to 12 in. — Luther Burbank"s 

 Hybrid Daisy, remarkable for its size, grace 

 and beauty. The flowers are of great substance 

 on long stems, with numerous petals of pure, 

 glistening white and bright yellow centers. 



Alaska. 12 to 15 in. — An improvement upon 

 the popular Shasta Daisy, with numerous long, 

 graceful petals of pure shining white. 



California. 12 to 15 in. — A pleasing lemon 

 vellow. double row of petals. 



King Edward VII. 9 to 12 in.— An English 

 variety. Blooms later than most others. 



Market Favorite. 12 to 15 in. — A late-bloom- 

 ing variety extensivelv grown for cut flowers. 



Each. 2nc.: dozen. $2.00: 100. $15.00. 



DELPHINIUM. Larkspur 



The Perennial Larkspurs are among the 

 most showy of hardy flowering plants. 



Belladonna. 3 ft. — Pure turquoise blue; a 

 continuous free bloomer from July until frost. 



Bellamosa. 3 to 4 ft. — Similar in form to Bel- 

 ladonna. Color is dark blue. It is not subject 

 to mildew. A strong grower. 



Formosum. 3 ft. — The blue Larkspur of 

 our grandmothers' gardens. Produces long 

 spikes of dark blue flowers with white centers. 



Hybridum. EXGLISH LARKSPUR. 3 to 

 5 ft. — Justly celebrated, uniting great size of 

 flowers with beauty of color. Exquisite flow- 

 ers in varied shades of blue, and others of 

 deep indigo and violet, lustered with metallic 

 hues. Blooms all summer. 



Sinensis. 18 in. — A very graceful semi-dwarf 

 variety, with intense gentian blue flowers in 

 open panicles and finely cut foliage. 



Sinensis alba. 18 in. — Flowers snow white. 



Each. 20c.: dozen, $2.00: 100. $15.00. 



DICENTRA. Bleeding Heart 



Spectabilis. 1^ to 2 ft. — A well-known 

 hardy perennial, producing freely in spring 

 and early summer beautiful heart-shaped flow- 

 ers of pale crimson and silvery white in grace- 

 ful drooping racemes sometimes a foot long. 

 Fern-like foliage. Each, 75c.; dozen, $7.50. 



DIGITALIS. Foxglove 



Gloxinaeflora. l^/S to 2 ft. — A large-flowered 

 form of the old-fashioned Foxglove. Whjte. 

 Purple, Pfnk, and Mixed Colors. Each, 15c.: 

 dozen. $1.50; im. $10.00. 



DESMODIUM. Bush Trefoil 

 Penduliflorum. 3 to 4 ft. — An exceedingly 

 attractive and eiYective shrubby plant \yith 

 large, long, drooping clusters of showy reddish- 

 purple flowers along the branches. Each, 35c.; 

 dozen, $3.50. 



