HARDY PERENNIAL PLANTS 
FOR PERMANENT PLANTING IN BORDERS OR BEDS 
Unless noted, all items under this 
heading at the uniform price of 
15 ets. each; $1.50 per dozen. 
Achillea, The Pearl. One of the very best white 
flowered border plants, resembling Pompon Chrys- 
anthemums. 
— Millefolium Roseum. (Rosy Milfoil.) Finely cut 
foliage, flat flower heads, color magenta. 
Agrostemma Coronaria. (Rose Campion.) Flowers 
bright crimson, phlox shaped; with velvety silver 
foliage. 10 cts.; $1.00 per dozen. 
— Coronaria Alha. White flowers. lo cts.; Ii.oo doz. 
Alyssum Saxatile Compactum. (Golden Tuft.) A 
useful little border and rockery plant, growing not 
over 12 inches high; covered with enveloping flat 
clusters of bright golden-yellow flowers early in 
summer. lo cts. ; $i.oo per dozen. 
Anchusa Italica, Dropmore Variety. A vastly 
improved form of the Italian Alkanet, with 3 to 4 
feet of coarse, leafy growth and a continuous show 
of deep blue clusters all summer. 35 cts.; I3.50 
per dozen. 
Anemone Japonica. (Wind Flowers.) 2 to 3 feet. 
Alba. Purest white, with yellow center. 10 cts. ; 
$1.00 per dozen. 
— Prince Henry. Large double, deep pink. 
— Queen Charlotte. Broad, semi-double flowers of 
La France pink, 10 cts.; $1.00 per dozen. 
— Rose d' Autumn. A beautiful shade of shell-pink; 
large single flowers in abundance. 
— Rosea Superha. Delicate silvery rose. 
— Rubra. Showy rose-color, yellow center. 10 cts.; 
1 1. 00 per dozen. 
— Whirlwind. Double white. 10 cts.; $1.00 per doz. 
Anthemis Tinctoria. (Golden Marguerite.) Daisy- 
like flowers, clear yellow. 2 feet. 10 cts.; Ii.oo per 
dozen. 
Pallida. Creamy white. 10 cts.; Ii.oo per doz. 
Aquilegia. (Columbine.) 
— Canadensis. The native Columbine, with bright 
red and yellow flowers. 
— Chrysantha. The "Golden Spur" Columbine. 
— Caerulea. The dainty "Rocky Mountain Colum- 
bine," blue and white. 
Hybridum. Very large flowered Hybrids in 
varied shades of the mother colors. 
— Helenae. Blue, with white corolla, 
— Nivea Grandiilora. Pure white. 
— Truncata. Scarlet, with yellow tips. 
Armeria Maritima Splendens. (Sea Thrift or Cush- 
ion Pink.) Dwarf compact growing plants, foliage 
evergreen, throwing up numberless spikes of rosy 
pink flowers from spring till fall. Old clumps 
resemble a round, velvety cushion. 
Asclepias Tuberosa. (Butterfly Flower.) Flowers 
brilliant orange red, on stems 2 feet high, each pro- 
ducing several heads. 10 cts. ; $1.00 per dozen. 
Asters. (Michaelmas Daisies.) Bloom all fall in great 
profusion. Perfectly hardy. 
— Laevis. A splendid light blue variety. 
— Mme. Soyneuse. Dwarf; deep purple, with yellow 
center. 
Asters Novae Angliae. Its deep bluish purple flowers 
make a charming show after many fall plants have 
succumbed to the cold. 
^Rosea. Rosy crimson. 
— Snowflake. 18 inches; pure white. 
— Tartarica. Bright purple; heavy stems and foliage, 
5 feet. 
— Thos. S. Ware. Delicate blue, 3 to 4 feet. 
— Trinervus. Deep violet-purple, in bloom during 
October and November, 2}4 feet. 
— White Queen. Dwarf, good cutting sort; creamy 
white, with twisted petals. 
Bocconia Cordata. (Plume Poppy.) Six feet. Im- 
mense flat, deeply indented leaves of silvery green 
on paler stalks. Flowers creamy white,- produced 
in large panicles. 10 cts.; Ii.oo per dozen. 
Boltonia Asteroides. (False Chamomile.) Bushy 
plants S feet high, with Aster-like white flowers. 
10 cts.; Ii.oo per dozen. 
— Latisquama. Lavender pink. 10 cts.; |i.oo per 
dozen. 
Campanula Carpatica. (Carpathian Hare-Bell.) A 
pretty compact species, not exceeding eight inches 
high, flowers one inch in diameter. Blue or Whiter 
— Media. The well known "Canterbury Bells." 
Bloom in July; height 2 to 3 feet. Blue, Rose or 
White. 
— PersicifoUa. (Peach Bells.) iK to 2 feet high; 
salver-shaped flowers. Blue or White. 
— Pyramidalis. (Chimney Bell-flower.) Very con- 
spicuous; 4 to 5 feet high. Salver-shaped flowers 
borne profusely in September. Blue or White. 
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