OFFICE: On Grounds, Route 22, l 1 /^ Miles from Milwaukee Ave. 
35 
STATICE 
POLEMONIUM 
SCUTELLARIA (Skull Cap) 
Coelestina. Pretty blue Siberian Rock Plant. each ZOc; per 10 $1.80 
SEDUM (Stone Crop) 
Fine plants for the rock garden. A genus of plants with more or less fleshy leaves 
belonging to the Houseleek order. The species vary in habit from dwarf creeping 
plants to those of large growth as the Spectable, grows upwards of 2 feet high. 
Some, too, are of evergreen and others of deciduous growth. The dwarf kinds do 
well as edgings to borders and the others are suitable for grouping in the mixed 
border. They are the easiest of all plants to grow. 
Abturatum. Forms dense colonies with thick leaves of coppery tint. 
Dary Phyllum. Tiny plant with grayish blue bead-like leaves. 
Divergens. Bead-like leaves and reddish stems an inch or so high. 
each 25c; per 10 $2.25 
Dwarf Varieties 
Acre. (Golden Moss). Much used for covering graves; foliage green; flowers bright 
yellow. each 18c; per 10 $1.50 
Aldum. Dwarf and spreading; thick, waxy round folia'ge, white flowers; good rock 
plant. each 18c; per 10 $1.50 
Hispanicum. 2 inch mossy growth with grayish blue foliage. 
each ZOc; per 10 $1.80 
Pruniatum Forsterianum. Pretty glaucous, bluish green leaves oi trailing habit with 
golden yellow flowers; 3 in. high. 
each 20c; per 10 $1.80 
Reflexum. 
each 18c; per 10 $1.50 
Rupestris. 
each 20c; per 10 $1.80 
Sarmemtosum. Excellent dwarf variety for rockeries or border edgings. The best 
Sedum for filling seams between rocks in wall garden. Rapid grower. 
each 20c; per 10 $1.80 
Sexangulare. Yellow flowers. 
each 20c; per 10 $1.80 
RUDBECKIA (Cone Flower) 
Purpurea. Flowers about 4 inches across, of 
a peculiar reddish-purple with a remark¬ 
ably large cone-shaped center of brown 
forms bushy plants 3 feet high, and blooms 
from July to October. 
each 20c; per 10 $1.80 
SALVIA (Meadow Sage) 
Showy, hardy plants of medium growth and 
of easy cultivation in sunny borders. The 
flowers are borne in spikes, racemes or 
panicles, and very attractive during the 
summer months. Belongs to the Sage 
order. 
Argentea. 3 feet. June. Silvery white foli¬ 
age, pyramids of yellow flowers. 
each 20c; per 10 $1.80 
Azurea Grandiflora. 4 feet. September and 
October. Stately willow-like growth, spikes 
of pale blue flowers in great profusion. 
each 20c; per 10 $1.80 
Pratensis. 2 feet. A dark blue perennial 
variety. each 20c; per 10 $1.80 
SAPONARIA 
Ocymoides Splendens. 6 inches. A showy 
dwarf trailing plant, producing a sheet of 
vivid crimson flowers. June-August. 
each 20c; per 10 $1.80 
SCABIOSA (Pincushion) 
Handsome border plants, succeeding in any 
ordinary soil if well drained and in a 
sunny location, and should be grown in 
every garden where cut flowers are 
wanted; they last a long time when picked 
and placed in water. 
Caucasica Perfecta. Light blue flowers 
fringed on long stem; fine for cutting. 
18 inches. June to October. 
each' 25c; per 10 $2.25 
Columbaria Rosea. Deep rosy mauve almost 
a rose. Deeply laciniated foliage. 
each 25c; per 10 $2.25 
House’s New Giant Hybrids. 18 inches. June- 
Oct. Shades of blue and lavender. 
each 25c; per 10 $2.25 
Japonica. 2 feet. Lavender-blue flowers. 
September to frost. 
each 25c; per 10 $2.25 
VIOLA 
