ANTHEMIS  tinctoria,  var.  Kelwayii.  Hardy 
Marguerite.  A  bush}'  plant  about  18  inches 
high,  with  a  continuous  show  through  the  sum- 
mer of  golden  yellow,  daisy-like  flowers. 
AQUILEGIA  Californica  hybrida.  An  assorted 
type  of  the  popular  Columbine. 
A.  Canadensis.  Xatwe  Columbine.  Bright  red 
and  yellow.  Splendid  in  perennial  beds  and  for 
natural  plantings. 
A.  chrysantha.  Columbine.  Growing  to  about  18 
inches  to  2  feet.  From  May  to  July,  bright  with 
fragrant  golden  yellow  flowers. 
A.  flabellata  nana  alba.  Dwarf  Japanese  variety 
with  white  flowers. 
A.  nivea  grandiflora.  Fine  pure  white  sort. 
A.  vulgaris.  European  Columbine.  Violet-blue. 
ARABIS  alpina.  Rock  Cress.  A  very  low-spread- 
ing plant  completely  covered  with  pure  white 
flowers  in  April  and  May. 
ASTER  Novae-Angliae.  A  showy  autumn  plant 
about  4  feet  in  height  with  bluish  purple  flowers. 
A  good  plant  for  sylvan  and  natural  plantings, 
yar.  Mrs.  F.  W.  Raynor.  Light  reddish  purple. 
A.  White  Queen.    Free-flowering  white  sort. 
One  of  the  most  showy  kinds. 
Hardy  Chrysanthemums.   (See  page  7  1 1 
70 
BAPTISIA  Australis.  False  Indigo.  Spikes  of 
dark  blue  flowers,  about  2  feet  high  in  June  and 
July.  A  splendid  strong-growing  plant  wHh 
deeply  cut  foliage. 
BELLIS  perennis.  English  Daisy.  An  improved 
strain  in  which  we  have  both  white  and  pink, 
flowers. 
BOCCONIA  cordata.  During  July  and  August  this 
tall  perennial  (6  to  8  feet)  is  at  its  best,  with 
large,  loose  terminal  panicles  of  creamy  white 
flowers.  It  is  a  splendid  thing  to  use  in  shrub- 
bery borders  and  in  connection  with  smaller 
plants  of  any  kind. 
BOLTONIA  asteroides.  False  Chamomile.  A 
strong-growing  plant,  3  to  5  feet,  that  is  cov- 
ered during  the  summer  and  early  autumn  with 
hundreds  of  small  white  flowers.  The  Boltonias 
are  the  most  showy  herbaceous  plants  in  their 
season. 
B.  latisquama.  The  flower  is  a  very  pale  pink  ;  in 
other  respects  similar  to  the  above. 
CALIMERIS  incisa.  A  border  plant  that  produces 
daisy-like  lavender 
flowers,  with  yellow 
centers  from  July  to 
September. 
CALLIRHOE  involu- 
crata.  A  low-growing 
carpet  plant,  with  large 
saucer  -  shaped  flowers 
of  rosy  crimson  color. 
CAMPANULA  carpatica. 
Compact  tufts  about 
10  inches  high.  Flowers  blue,  lasting 
all  summer. 
var.  alba.  White-flowered  form  of  the 
above. 
C.  medium  calycanthema.  Cup  and  Saucer  Can- 
terbury Bells.  Blue,  white  and  rose. 
,  persicifolia.  Blue  and  white  star-shaped  flow- 
ers with  deep  chalice,  in  cluster  on  spikes  about 
2  feet  high  at  the  first  of  June, 
var.  alba.  White  flower.  Otherwise  similar  to 
the  above. 
,  pyramidalis.  Chimney  Bellflower.  The  most 
conspicuous  Campanula  when  weighted  in  Sep- 
tember with  4-  to  5-foot  spikes  of  blue  flowers. 
C.  rapunculoides.  Graceful  spikes  3  feet  high, 
loaded  in  June  and  July  with  blue  bell-shaped 
flowers. 
CARYOPTERIS  Mastacanthus.  Blue  Spirea,  or 
Verbena  Shrub.  A  shrubby  plant  valued  for  its 
wealth  of  blue  flowers  that  come  in  September. 
CASSIA  Marilandica.  A  desirable,  shrubby  looking 
plant  3  to  4  feet  high,  with  panicles  of  bright 
yellow  flowers  in  July"  and  August. 
CEPHALARIA  alpina.  Delicate  sulphur-yellow 
flowers  in  July  and  August.  A  rare  plant  that 
frequently  attains  a  height  of  6  feet. 
GLENWOOD  NURSERIES 
