Sweet William 
Digitalis 
Delphinium 
CAMPANULA. Bellflower. 
♦Carpatica. Carpathian Harebell. A pretty 
species growing in compact tufts 8 inches high. 
Clear blue flowers borne erect on wiry stems. 
Blooms from June to October. Unsurpassed 
for the rockery or for edging the hardy border. 
♦Carpatica alba. White form cf the preceding. 
♦Rotundifolia. Blue Bells of Scotland; Hare¬ 
bells. Dainty, clear blue bells and wiry stems. 
Desirable for rock-crevices or deep slopes. 
Best planted to show pendent habit. Sun or 
partial shade. 1 ft. 
Medium. Canterbury Bells. Popular biennal 
plants for garden massing. Strong stems 2 to 4 
feet high with erect bells of pink, blue, lilac 
and white flowers. 
Calycanthema. Cup and Saucer. Tall, erect- 
growing plants with large, cup-and-saucer- 
shaped flowers during May and June. A 
perfect plant for the old-fashioned hardy 
garden. White, Blue, Lilac, or Pink. Sun or 
partial shade, in rich, well-drained, light soil. 
CARNATION Allwoodii. 
♦Joyce. Soft rose-pink, with amaranth-red 
center. A hybrid between the Perpetual- 
flowering Carnation and the Hardy Garden 
Pink. It flowers from early spring throughout 
the entire summer and autumn. It is adapt¬ 
able for all sheltered gardens and rockeries. 
Cut the flowers with long stems well into the 
plant; cut back all long growths in autumn. 
CATANANCHE. Blue Cupidone; Love-plant; 
Cupid’s Dart. This perennial grows well in 
average garden soil and dry, well-drained 
sunny positions. 
♦Caerulea. Heads of brilliant deep blue flowers 
on 18-inch stems. Excellent for cut-flowers in 
great quantities from June to September. 
CERASTIUM. 
Tomentosum. Snow-in-Summer. A low- 
growing plant having silvery white foliage 
and producing an abundance of snow-white 
flowers in May. Especially suitable for rock 
or border purposes. 
CHRYSANTHEMUM, Hardy Garden. Page 12. 
CLEMATIS, Climbing Varieties. See page 15. 
DAISY, SHASTA (Chrysanthemum maximum ). 
Alaska. Glistening white flowers, 3 to 4 inches 
across, with broad, waxy petals and yellow 
centers. They bloom the entire season and 
furnish an unfailing supply of cut-flowers. 
1 to 2 ft. 10 cts. each, $1 per doz. 
DELPHINIUM. Hardy Larkspur. 
It requires partial shade, a sheltered location, 
rich, loamy, well-drained soil, deeply dug and 
pulverized. Cut the flowers with long stems well 
into the plant, and on no account allow seeds to 
develop. Divide every three years and replant 
in freshly dug and manured beds. 
Belladonna Improved. The freest and most 
continuous blooming of all the Delphiniums, 
never being out of flower from the end of 
June until cut down by hard frost. Clear 
turquoise-blue; beautiful sprays. 
Bellamosa. An intensely rich, deep blue form 
of Belladonna. 
DIANTHUS. Pinks. 
Barbatus. See page 27. 
♦Deltoides, Brilliant. Maiden Pink. A 
beautiful little prostrate plant with narrow 
leaves, bearing a profusion of small, glowing 
crimson-red flowers during the summer. A 
striking rock-plant. 
Plumarius, Spring Beauty. Extra-double, 
giant-flowered Clove Pinks, carnation-like in 
form and size and with a beautiful range of 
color; very fragrant. 
Essex Witch. Delicate pink, fringed. 
Bristol Maid. Rose-pink. 
DICENTRA. Bleeding-Heart. 
Spectabilis. An cld-fashioned favorite. Grace¬ 
ful, drooping racemes of heart-shaped pink 
flowers. Easily cultivated in borders and 
especially valuable for planting in shady 
spots. Strong clumps, 40 cts. each. 
DIGITALIS. Foxglove. 
Tall, stately plants that make a charming 
effect grown in masses or in the hardy borders. 
They succeed in average soil in sun or shade, but 
are averse to deep planting. 3 to 4 ft. 
Purpurea gloxiniaeflora, Mixed. 
♦EDELWEISS. See Leontopodium. 
ERINUS. 
♦Alpinus. Pretty rosettes of foliage and 
racemes of rosy purple or white flowers. 
Invaluable for rock walls, in crevices, or 
between steps. Requires average soil and 
protection from excessive moisture. 4 ft. 
FEVERFEW. Matricaria. 
Capensis alba plena. Double White Feverfew. 
Free-flowering plants, producing, all season, 
fine, double white flowers. A fine bedding plant. 
Little Gem. A most useful border plant and 
valuable summer cut-flower, with large, 
double white flowers. June until October. 
1 to 2 ft. 
Field-grown clumps, 25 cts. each, $2 per doz. Pot-grown plants, 15 cts. each, $1.50 per doz 
except where noted 
