DiNGEE Roses IDn Own Roots 



Single and Double Violets 



German Iris 



The memory of the "Blue Flag" of the 

 old-time gardens is one ever sweet to those 

 whose lives were lived in such surround- 

 ings, and while the "modem" Irises, if we 

 may use the term, will remind one of the 

 old days, they, too, like everything else 

 of these days, have yielded to the influence 

 of improvement, and there has been evolved 

 a race of flowers absolutely bewildering in 

 glory of their form and color. 

 Canary Bird (Flavescens) — Lovely pale yel- 

 low. 



Darius — Yellow and lilac. 



Honorabilis — Deep yellow; mahogany falls. 



Florentina Alba (Silver King) — Early white. 



Ingeborg (Interregna) — Immense white; ex- 

 tra early. 



Mrs. H. Darwin — White, violet veining, 

 rather dwarf. 



Lohengrin — Foliage and flowers immense, of 

 a deep violet mauve, almost pink; a won- 

 derful flower. 



Queen of May (Rosy Morn) — Lovely rose 

 lilac. 



Madame Thibault — White, bordered rose lilac 

 companion to Mad. Chereau; edge more 

 pinkish. 



Cherion — Standar 

 mauve. 



lac-m.auve; falls violet- 

 Price, 15c each; 9 for $1.00, postpaid. 



Dingee Hardy Violets 



Rich in modest beauty and famed for its enchanting fragrance, the 

 \'iolet continues to increase in popularity. With the last snows of 

 winter still about it, this gentle flower shyly appears from out of 

 its icy bed, heralding the coming of spring. All our plants are 

 absolutely clean and healthy and will produce highly satisfactory 

 results. 



Prices, strong plants, IZYzC each; any 12 for $1.25. 

 Marie Lynch — In color it is a charming shade of lavender-pink and 



the foliage is rich dark green. 

 California — The largest violet in cultivation. Rich, violet-blue; 



flowers on long stems. 

 Farquhar — Double fowers of delicate fragrance; deep blue. 

 Governor Herrick — Rich, dark purple; single. 

 Lady Hume Campbell — Double blue. Strong, healthy and perfectly 



hardy. 

 Prince of Wales — One of the best. The large, blue, single flowers 

 are deliciously fragrant. 



Swanley White — Pure white, perfectly double, fragrant flowers. 

 Peacock, New Violet — This is an entrancingly beautiful new Violet; 



the marking of its charming color are difficult to describe. 



The orevailing color in white, with delicate tracings and markings 



of sky-blue. 



Hardy Perennials 



Yucca Filamentosa — Spanish Bayonet — A low-growing evergreen 

 plant with narrow leaves. The flov.'er stalk is from 2 to 4 feet 

 high and rises from the center. Creamy white, bell-shaped flowers. 

 25c each; 5 for $1.00. 



FUNKIA (Day Lilv> Subcordata Grandiflora — White Day Lily. 

 Handsome spikes of large, waxy-like blossoms, with an odor like 

 that of orange blossoms, and large, broad, glossy, light-green 

 foliage. One foot to 18 inches. 25c each. 



Funkia Aurea Variegata — Flowers purplish-lilac; leaves beautiful 

 variegated green and gold. 2 feet. 25c each. 



HIBISCUS MEEHAN'S MARVEL MALLOW. They make a bush-like 

 growth from 4 to 5 feet high and 2 to 3 feet across. The flowers 

 are of an enormous size, f reouently 8 to 1 inches in diameter and 

 ranging in color from fiery crimson through various shades of red, 

 pink and white. Price, mived colors. Pink, Red or White, strong 

 2-year-old field-grown roots. 75c each. 



DELPHINIUM (Belladonna) — EverbHoming hardy Larkspur. The 

 most beautiful sky blue of dwarf habit. 3 to 4 feet. Blooms all 

 summer until cut down by frost. 



Formosum — Deep gentian blue with white bee. Long spikes. 18 

 inches to 2 feet. 



Chinese Album — A white flowered form. 2 feet. 



RUBECKIA, GOLDEN GLOW — Grows 6 to 8 feet high, branching 

 freelv and bearing by the hundreds on long, graceful stems ex- 

 quisite double flowers of golden yellow. 25c each, postpaid. 



A Bed of German Iris 



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