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A View in our Ni'hserv, whehe we grow Hardy Perennial Plants by the Acre. 



01- all the plants that are cultivated for jnirelv ornamental purposes there are none which have made such rapid strides in 

 public favor as the Old=fashioned Hardy Garden Flowers, the inhalntants of the perennial garden. Their popularity 

 is not at all surprising when we consider the many varied and pleasant changes which take i)lace throughout the entire 

 growing season in a well-arranged hardy border, in which every week — yes, every day — brings forth something fiesh and new to 

 interest and delight even the most critical. Beginning in A|>ril, the early-flowering varieties open their flowers ofttn belore the 

 snow has entirely disappeared, and continue, with constant changing variety, throughout the sumnitr until late in the fall, when 

 only severe freezing weather will stop such persistent late-blooming kinds as Japanese Anemones, Pompon Chrysanthemums, 

 Gaillardias, Gentians, Tritomas, etc. 



Twenty years ago there were very few Hardy Perennial Borders outsiile of some large establishments where one or more pro- 

 fessional gardeners were employed, who were familiar with the beauties of the hardy borders as found in almost every garden on 

 the other side of the Atlantic, and who knew how to plan, and plant, and care for them. Bdt a great change has taken place in 

 this country within the last ten years, and there is now a steady and growing interest in this class of plants, and to-day almost 

 everyone who is fortunate enough to have even a small garden devotes at least a part of it to hardy plants. 



This change has, in a measure, been created by the many books on Gardening published in recent years, almost every one of 

 which included a chapter or more on the hardy border, while some of them were devoted exclusively to hardy plants. The 

 Horticultural Press has also been a great factor in stimulating interest in hardy plants. Unfortunately, while nearly all of the 

 books and magazine articles give glowing descriptions of the delights of the Hardy Border and describe in detail many of the 

 plants, none, as far as we know, give any drawings or plans showing how such a border should be made, or showing the proper 

 location for the various plants in same. The usual excuse for this omission was that each garden demanded special treatment, and 

 that no plan or set of plans could be used for any great number of jjlaces, and while this is in some cases true, we feel sure that 

 the several plans which we have had prepared by a practical Landscape Artist, and which embody a great many of our own ideas, 

 and which are reproduced on pages 8 and 9 of this book, will enable many amateurs to undertake the making of a hardy border 

 who have until now been deterred from doing so by not knowing how to go about it. 



The plants which we have selected to fill the various sections in the borders illustrated are the kinds that always do well and are 

 most likely to give satisfactory results. Some planters may prefer to make their own selection, and we like to encourage this, as it 

 gives to every border a touch of individuality, and to make this easy we give on pages 2 to 7 and 11 to 17 a complete alphabetical 

 list of the hardy plants we offer this season, together with their color, average height of growth, time of flowering, and whether 

 suited for a sunny or shady location. This list should make it comparatively easy, even for a novice, to make a selection to fill a 

 bed of any size or shape without making a serious blunder. 



We strongly recommend that all hardy borders should have a ft-w clumps of spring flowt-ring bulbs interspersed along the 

 front, including Snowdrops, Scillas, Chionodoxas, Crocus, Narcissus, Cottage Garden Tulips, Spanish Lis, etc., etc. These 

 should be planted from September to November, and will greatly add to the interest of the border during the early spring 

 months. We also suggest the putting of a few clusters of Annuals here and there throughout the border to add color during the 

 hot summer months. For this purpose there is nothing better than Marigolds, Gaillardias, Zinnias, Antirrhinums, etc., etc., a few 

 seeds of which can be sov.n during jNIay in the spaces where they are wanted to bloom. 



Copyright 1914, by Henry A. Dreer Incorporated, Philadelphia, Pa. 



