DUPUY & FERGUSON, 38 JACQUES CARTIER SQUARE, MONTREAL 
HARDY PERENNIAL PLANTS 
Achillea "Perry's White."- 
_Tliis fine novelty is a seedling 
variety of Achillea Ptarmica, 
raised at Perry's Hardy Plant Farms. It grows over 3 feet In height, and 
has stiff, rigid, much-branching stems, the laterals being 1 foot or more in 
length, and forming a pyramidal bush, 3 feet through. The double, white 
flowers are produced In the wildest profusion, and each flower measures 
1 inch in diameter. The plants flower from June to late autumn, and the 
variety is extremely valuable for cutting or for decorative purposes. 
Messrs. Perry exhibited the novelty at the K. H. S. meeting and gained an 
Award of Merit for their novelty. 25 cts. each: $2.50 per doz. 
Achillea Kelway's Carmine Red. — Large heads of carmine red flowers 
blooms all summer; extremely hardy and persistent; excellent for natural- 
izing. IHfeet. 25 cts. each; $2.50 per doz.: $15.00 per 100. 
Achillea, "The Pearl." — Numerous double white flowers, fine for cutting, 
flowers all summer; 2 feet, 20 cts. each; $2.00 per doz. 
Arnnitum Wil<snn! I' 's of a strong, stately habit of growth, 
Aconitum w lisoni. attaining a height of from 5 to 6 feet, with 
very large flowers of a light violet-blue color. It commences to bloom 
early in September, and after the terminal raceme is over others are pro- 
duced from the branches lower down on the stems, by which means the 
season is extended to October. Each. SO cts.; per doz.. $5.00. 
Aconitum Napellus. — Monkshood. A tall plant, with spikes of showy 
blue helmet-shaped flowers. 3 to 4 feet. July. .j35 cts. each: $3.50 per 
doz. 
Aconitum Napellus bicolor. — One Of the earliest and best, with a profu- 
sion of pale blue and white flowers. 2 to 3 feet. July, Aug. 35 cts. 
each; $3.50 per doz. 
.^gopodium (Bishop's Weed) 
Podagraria Variegata. — A rapid-growing plant, with neat green and yellow 
variegated foliage, thriving in any soil ; makes a fine border for a bed of 
shrubs or for covering waste ground; 1 foot. 20 cts. each; $2.00 per doz. 
. Large blood 
crimson flow- 
ers completely covering the plant and flowering all summer. 2 to 3 feet. 
Each, 25 cts.; doz.. $2.50. 
Agrostemma Coronaria Alba. — White form of above. 25 cts. 
each; $2.50 per doz. 
Agrostemma Coronaria Atrosanguinea.- 
Aiyssum. 
Alyssum Saxatile Compactum- 
_ (Basket of Gold, 
Gold Tuft, Eock- 
madwort). — An indispensable plant for the rockery or border, 
growing 1 foot high and producing early in summer masses of 
broad, flat heads of bright yellow flowers. 25 cts. each; $2.50 
per doz. 
Anthemis Tinctoria Kelwayi (^f„^<[£mTXei; 
cut foliage, and large golden deep golden-yellow flowers produced 
all summer. Succeed in the poorest soil. 25 cts. ea£h; $2.50 
per doz. 
Anchusa Italica Dropmore Var. — |f®y"°« 
splendid flowers are of the purest blue imaginable and produced 
on branched stems, about 4 feet high. It is doubtless the finest 
blue herbaceovis plant in cultivation. Blooms in June and 
July. Each, 40 cts.; $3.50 per doz. 
Anchusa Opal. — (New). — Very beautiful variety, with large, 
pale blue flowers, 3 to 4 feet. 40 cts. each; $3.50 per doz. 
Anchusa Italica. — Large heads, blue, flowers all season; 3 ft. 
35 cts. each; $3.00 per dozen. 
Anemone Queen Charlotte, — very large semi-dou- 
^ ble flowers of that 
pleasing shade of siivery-plnk peculiar to the La France Rose, a 
color that is as beautiful as it is rare among hardy plants. 
Flowers in September to frost: 2}4 feet. Each, 35 cts.; $3.00 
per doz. 
Anemone Japonlca. — White or rose, 
doz. 
35 cts. each; $3.00 per 
Anthericum. (St. Bruno's Lily) 
Llliastrum Giganteum. — A giant-flowering form of the St. 
Bnmo's Lily, producing in May strong spikes of large white 
flowers, which forcibly remind one of a miniature form of the 
Lilium Candidum or Madonna Lily. A very attractive hardy 
plant. 40 cts. each; $4.00 per doz. 
Aquilegia D. & F's. Long-Spurred Hybrids. 
This grand strain has been much admired wherever exhibited. 
The seed is saved from selected plants only chosen either for 
size, form or delicacy of colouring. The colours are distinct 
shades of red, cerise, white, lavender, salmon, mauve, pink, 
yellow, etc The size of the blooms are unusually large with 
long spurs, foliage small and graceful, and plants very free flower- 
ing, 25 cts. each; $2.50 per doz. 
Artemisia Lactlflora. — Un ike the varieties offered. 
, ,. , which are grown for their 
foliage, this comparatively new introduction from China is a 
moat effective flowering plant, with erect stems 3H to 4}^ feet 
high, clothed with elegantly-cut dark green foliage and ter- 
minated by panicles of Hawthorn-scented creamy-white Spiraea- 
like hght and graceful flowers. It is at Its best from the latter 
part of August to the end of September, and is particularly 
valuable on this account, being imlike any other plant in bloom 
at that time. 40 cts. each: $4.00 per doz. 
Asclepias Tuberosa. — very attractive plants about 
, , , . 2 feet high, and producing, 
irora July to August 15, close compact umbles of brilliant orange- 
colored flowers, 40 cts. each; $4.00 per doz. 
Asclepias Incarnata Rosea. — A selection of our native milk- 
weed, having pretty rosy flesh-colored flowers during July and 
August. 25 cts. each: $2.50 per doz. 
Astilbe. — -'^^^ varieties offered below are stately, hardy 
plants and succeed best in rather heavy soil and 
where they will riot suffer for lack of moisture. 
Astilbe Grandis. — A grand species and a fine companion to 
A. Davidi. being of similar habit of growth, the panicles of white 
flowers frequently 2 to 2)^ feet long: the foliage is much divided 
and attractive. 40 cts. each; $3.50 per doz. 
Astilbe Hybrida Gruno. — A splendid salmon-pink sort grow- 
ing 4 feet high and producing light, graceful, spreading spikes 
of flowers, the finest pink Astilbe yet introduced. 50 cts. each. 
Astilbe Hybrida Moerheimi. — A cross between A. Davidi and 
an unknown variety, with the strong, robust growth of the for- 
mer, attaining a height of 5 to 6 feet. The well-branched, erect 
spikes of flowers have a length of over two feet and are of a 
beautiful creamy-white. The originator and introducer, a 
prominent Holland grower, was awarded a first-class certificate 
for this novelty by the Royal Horticultural Society of HoUand 
and considers this plant the most Important hardy perennial 
introduced in many years. Strong plants. 60 cts. each. 
Astilbe Hybrida Salland. — This is a cross, with A Davidi as 
one of Its parents, which it resembles in habit of growth, only 
much more vigorous, growing over 6 feet high and with flowers 
of a distinct red color, different from all others. 50 cts. each- 
$5.00 per doz. 
Astilbe Thunbergii (Rivularls) Major. — Long spikes of 
white flowers on long stems. July. 50 cts. each; $5.00 per doz. 
Arabis Alpina. — white flowers in great profusion, 
good for rockery, flowers in early 
spring: 6 inches. 25 cts. each; $2.50 per doz. 
Aster Mixed. — From finest named varieties. Colors 
ranging from pure white to deep crimson 
and deep purple in all sections, and Will be found very varied 
in size and time of flowering. These have been raised from the 
tlnest named varieties, and for large plantings, and for massing 
will be found equally as effective as the named varieties. 25 ctt. 
each: $2.50 per d^z. 
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