FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY, 1 8 78 - 1 9 2 8 



Hardy Perennials (Continued) 



All varieties (unless otherwise noted), each, 20c; dozen, ^2.00; 100, ^14.00. 



DICENTRA— Bleeding Heart 



CERASTIUM 



Biebersteinii (Snow in Summer) — 6 to 10 inches. A low, densely 

 growing plant, with small, silvery leaves which appear as though 

 covered with hoar frost. Valuable for edging rockeries and for 

 holding steep banks. White flowers. 



CLEMATIS 



Davidiana — 2 to 3 feet. Produces large clusters of beautiful, fra- 

 grant, hyacinth-like flowers of deep celestial blue from mid-July to 

 late September. Each, 30c; dozen, ^3.00. 



CONVALLARIA 



(Lily-of-the-Valley) 



Majalis — 8 to 10 in. This uni- 

 versal favorite scarcely needs de- 

 scription. Succeeds best in partial 

 shade, in rich soil with plenty of manure. We offer American-grown 

 plants of the giant-flowered variety. 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. Unquestionably the best of all 

 hardy yellow flowers for massing. Blooms constantly from June until 

 frost, with large, daisy-like flowers on wiry stems. 



DAISY (Hardy Daisy) 



Shasta Daisy — 9 to 12 inches. Luther Burbank's Hybrid Daisy. The 

 flowers are of great substance, on long stems, with numerous petals, 

 pure white with bright yellow centers. 



Alaska — 12 to 15 inches. An improvement upon the popular Shasta 



Daisy, with long, graceful, white petals. 



California — 12 to 15 inches. A pleasing light yellow. 



King Edward VII — 9 to 12 inches. Blooms late; white. 



Market Favorite — 12 to 15 inches. Late; white. 



DELPHINIUM (Hardy Larkspur) 



Among the showiest of hardy flowering plants, the tall hybrids lend- 

 ing themselves particularly well for a background, in contrast with Hardy 

 Lilies. 



New Vanderbilt Hybrids — It is with particular pleasure that we offer 

 herewith some of these far famed new Hybrids. The Vanderbilt Hy- 

 brids surpass in great flowering qualities. The individual stalks, as well 

 as the number of florets per stem and size of individual florets, are 

 away ahead of any other strain of Delphiniums we know. Field-grown 

 plants from the originator, each, $1.00; dozen, $10.00. 



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FOXGLOVE— Digitalis 



