ON'S   PERENNI  A  L  S 
GERMAN  IRIS— Continued 
Chameleon.  Delicate  blue;  falls  tipped  a 
little  darker. 
Charlotte  Patty.  Golden-yellow;  lower  petals 
lightly  veined  with  blue. 
Charles  Dickens.  Practically  identical  with 
Madame  de  Brabant. 
Fairy  Queen.  Upper  petals  w^hite;  lower  veined 
with  blue. 
Florentina  alba.  White,  slightly  fragrant  and 
early. 
Garrick.  Upper  petals  delicate  light  blue; 
lower  a  darker  violet  blue.  Almost  identical  w  ith 
Herant  and  Viola. 
General  Agamemnon.  Upper  petals  white; 
lower  petals  blue. 
General  Grant.  Light  chocolate  color  above; 
falls  purplish,  veined  with  white. 
Leopoldi.    Bronze;  lower  petals  veined  maroon. 
Madame  de  Brabant.  Standards  lavender; 
falls  purple  streaked. 
Mme.  Chereau.  White,  with  a  delicate  fringe 
of  blue.    Taller-growing  than  other  sorts. 
Othello.  Upper  petals  bronze-yellow;  lower, 
purple. 
Pauline.  Light  blue;  lower  petals  slightly 
darker.  A  splendid  sort.  Flowers  delicate  and 
large. 
Princess  Mary.  Light  blue;  lower  petals 
tipped  purplish  blue  and  veined. 
Queen  of  Gypsies.  Standards  chocolate;  falls 
purple,  streaked  with  white. 
Virgin.  Light  bronze;  falls  purple,  veined  with 
white. 
SPECIAL  OFFER  OF  GERMAN  IRIS. 
If  the  purchaser  does  not  desire  his  varieties 
named,  we  can  give  him  a  good  assortment  of  desir- 
able colors.  Each  10  100 
Strong  plants   $0  12      $1  00      $7  00 
Extra  heavy  clumps   15       1  25      10  00 
Japanese  Iris  (Iris  Ksempferi) 
Prices  of  all  the  varieties,  25  cents  each; 
$2.00  per  10;  $15.00  per  100. 
Antelope.  White  ground,  heavily  sprinkled  with 
rich  purple. 
Artus.  Mottled  with  lavender  and  bright  lilac. 
Very  showy. 
Kamana-sara.  Purple  veins  and  crimson  mar- 
gin on  a  blush  ground. 
Emperor.  Royal  purple;  base  of  petals  streaked 
with  yellow.    Gorgeous  sort. 
White  Empress.  White,  with  occasional  veins 
of  lilac.    A  good  kind. 
Yeddojoines.  Pale  blue  on  a  w^hite  ground; 
distinct  and  desirable. 
Yomo-no-umi.  Fine,  large,  pure  white  sort; 
base  of  petals  yellow. 
SPECIAL  OFFER  OF  JAPANESE  IRIS 
If  the  purchaser  does  not  desire  varieties  named, 
w-e  can  give  him  a  good  assortment  of  desirable  colors. 
Each  10  100 
Strong  root  divisions   $0  15      $1  25    $10  00 
Iris  Siberica.  Flowers  in  May  and  June,  on 
stems  about  3  feet  long.  Bright,  lilac-blue  flowers. 
Is  useful  for  cutting  and  good  for  masses,  especially 
along  water-edges. 
var.  alba.    White,  veined  W'ith  lilac. 
var.  orientalis.  Rich,  violet-blue  flowers,  borne 
in  lavish  profusion. 
LATHYRUS  latifolius.  Everlasting  or  Per- 
ennial Pea.  Climbs  to  8  to  10  feet  in  height,  and 
produces  clusters  of  large,  rosy- red,  pea-shaped,  blue 
flowers  the  entire  Summer.    Useful  for  cutting. 
var.  alba.  ■  A  white-flowered  form  of  the  above. 
LAVENDULA  vera.  The  Common  Lavender. 
With  familiar  aromatic  foliage  and  fragrant  blue 
flowers  in  July  and  August.   IK  f^'et. 
LIATRIS.  Blazing  Star,  or  Gay  Feather. 
During  July  this  plant  is  aglow  with  long  spikes  of 
rich,  rosy-purple  flow^ers.    4  to  5  feet. 
LINUM  perenne.  Flax.  1  >^  feet.  Graceful 
foliage;  large  blue  flowers  through  the  entire  sea- 
son. A  splendid  plant  for  colony  plantings,  espe- 
cially in  natural  landscapes. 
LOBELIA  cardinalis.  Cardinal  Flower. 
From  August  to  October.  The  bright  scarlet 
flowers  are  among  the  most  brilliant  in  the  hardy 
border,  growing  2  to  2 K  feet  high. 
var.  syphilitica.  A  strong  grow^er,  with  light 
blue  flowers. 
LYCHNIS  Chalcedonica.  London  Pride.  An 
especially  desirable  perennial,  with  brilliant  heads 
of  orange-scarlet  flowers  from  July  to  September. 
3  feet  high. 
LYSIMACHIA  nummularia.  Creeping 
Jenny.  Valued  for  planting  under  trees,  where 
grass  w'ill  not  grow.  Dainty,  glossy,  green  foliage, 
that  is  very  attracti^  e. 
LYTHRUM  roseum  superbum.  Rose  Loose- 
strife. Valued  in  all  perennial  borders  and  most 
soils.  Grows  about  3  feet  high,  and  from  July  to 
September  is  bright  with  spikes  of  rose-colored 
flowers. 
MONARDIA  didyma  splendens.  Bergamot. 
Bright  scarlet  flow-ers  on  spikes  2  to  3  feet  high 
during  July  and  August. 
var.  rosea.    A  pretty  rose-colored  form. 
var.  fistulosa  alba.  Wild  Bergamot.  White 
flowers. 
MYOSOTIS  palustris.  Forget-me-not.  Low 
grower,  bearing  a  profusion  of  small,  pale  blue 
flOw'ers  in  early  Summer.    A  general  favorite. 
OENOTHERA.  Evening  Primrose.  A  showy 
border  plant,  with  different-colored  flow'ers  that 
bloom  all  Summer. 
var.  Fraseri.    Beautiful  rich  yellow. 
var.  fruticosa  major.  A  w^ealth  of  bright 
flow^ers  throughout  the  Summer. 
PRICES  OF  PERENNIAL  PLANTS,  except  where   otherwise  noted,  are  15  cents  each; 
$1.25  per  10;  $10.00  per  100. 
MORRISVILLE,  PENNSYLVANIA 
73 
