Offering of 
HARDY ROCK AND ALPINE PLANTS 
ACHILLEA serbica. Silver-grey foliage and white 
flowers. 6-8 in. 
A. tomentosa. Flat mats of ferny foliage. Bright 
yellow flowers. 6-8 in. 
i^ETHIONEMA. “The most precious and exquisite 
queens of the rock garden” (Farrer). 
A. grandiflorum. Shrubby plants resembling Iber- 
is. Rosy-pink flowers. 
A. persicum. Strong, twiggy bushes covered with 
long slender spikes of rosy-pink flowers. 
ALYSSUM argenteum. Dense shrubby growth. 
Leaves silvery grey beneath, clusters of bright 
yellow flowers all summer. 
A. citrinum. Variety of A. saxatile, but flowers 
are pale citron-yellow. 
A. montanum. Very dwarf with silvery leaves and 
sweet scented yellow flowers. 
A. repens. Pretty trailing species, yellow flowers. 
A. rostratum (Weirzbicki). Prostrate, almost shrub¬ 
by variety, hoary grey all over. Flowers pale 
yellow; in unbranched heads. 
A. saxatile compactum. Showy, broad masses of 
bright yellow flowers in early spring. 15c each; 
2 for 25c. 
A. serpyllifolium. Very dwarf. 4 to 5 in. high 
with racemes of pale yellow flowers and rough, 
hoary leaves. Charming. 
A. spinosum roseum. Small attractive silver grey 
foliage. Flowers pale rose. 30c each. 
ANCHUSA myosotidiflora. From the Caucasus and 
is “one of the best azure-blue flowers for shady 
places in the rock garden” (Correvon). Flowers 
resemble forget-me-nots. 
ANDROSACE primuloides. Lilac verbena-like flow¬ 
ers and silky foliage. Beautiful. “They are the 
true ‘Flowering Moss/ the quintessence of every¬ 
thing brilliant and beautiful that is found in the 
flora of the high mountain ranges” (Correvon). 
A. vitaliana (Douglasia vit.). “This is a neat and 
charming thing, making a low tufted growth of 
little silvery leaves above which arise rather 
large yellow flowers” (Mrs. Wilder). 35c each. 
ANEMONE Pulsatilla (Pasque Flower). Downy 
buds opening into large violet purple flowers very 
early in spring. A choice plant. 
A. Pulsatilla alba. Same habit as Pulsatilla with 
beautiful white flowers. Very rare. 30c each. 
A. Pulsatilla rubra. Dwarf with reddish purple 
flowers. 
A. vernalis (Lady of the Snow). A rare and ex¬ 
quisite alpine. Large, open flowers of pure 
white, flushed violet outside, on short stems. 40c 
each. 
AQUILEGIA flabellata nana alba. A squat little 
Japanese species with shallow waxen blooms of 
pure white. “A neat and tidy species early 
blooming and of special loveliness” (Farrer). 
ARABIS alpina. Masses of pure white flowers in 
early spring. 
A. alpina flore pleno. A double flowering form. 
A. alpina rosea. Pink flowers. 
Prices on all plants, except as noted, 25c each 
