Liatris Phlox subulata Viola 
GAILLARDIA. Blanket Flower. 
Improved English Strain, Giant Hybrids. 
One of the best-known Hardy Perennials, 
growing to a height of about 20 inches. Blooms 
from early June to frost. Flowers are of 
gorgeous colorings—rich red-browns, orange, 
and yellows. Plant in full sun in rich but 
light soil. 
GEUM. Avens. 
These are most useful Hardy Perennials of a 
tufted habit of growth, producing a wealth of 
attractive flowers nearly all summer which are 
much prized for cutting. They require full sun 
and light soil. 1 ft. 
Lady Stratheden. A very popular new intro¬ 
duction and counterpart of Mrs. Bradshaw. 
Rich, golden yellow blooms. 
Mrs. Bradshaw. This variety has large, double 
flowers of a fiery orange-red with frilled petals. 
GYPSOPHILA. Baby’s Breath. 
Paniculata compacta. Feathery sprays of 
minute white flowers, forming a beautiful, 
gauze-like appearance. Blooms in August and 
September. It is partial to lime and averse to 
disturbance. Full sun. 2 to 3 ft. 
Paniculata flore-pleno. A light and graceful 
cut-flower. The masses of minute, double 
white flowers, when cut and dried, retain their 
beauty for many months. 35 cts. each, $3 
per doz. 
HELIANTHEMUM. Rock or Sun Rose. 
♦Mutabile. Exceedingly pretty, low-growing, 
evergreen plants, forming broad clumps. 
Dainty, rose-like flowers, varying from pink 
and white to yellow. Well adapted for the 
border, rock-garden, or dry, sunny banks. It 
fills spaces between rocks and softens edges of 
shelving rocks. Light, sandy soil. 
HIBISCUS. Mallow. See page 20. 
HOLLYHOCKS. 
These require rich, well-drained, medium soil, 
deeply dug, and full sun. Best results are ob¬ 
tained from vigorous young plants that have 
not yet flowered, and orders will be filled with 
this stock. 
Double, Newport Pink, White, Bright Rose, 
Salmon. Separate colors. 15 cts. each, $1 
per doz. 
HYPERICUM. St.-John’s-Wort. See page 20. 
IBERIS. Candytuft. 
*LittIe Gem. Dwarf, pure white flowers in 
May. Glaucous blue foliage. Its uniform, 
neat habit makes it one of our best rock or 
edging plants. Perfectly hardy in this climate. 
6 in. 
*Sempervirens. Very dwarf. A sheet cf white 
flowers completely covers its rich, dark green 
foliage in spring. A particularly fine rock- 
plant. When plants become straggly, trim 
them into shape directly after flowering as you 
would a dwarf shrub. 
LEONTOPODIUM. Edelweiss. 
*Alpinum. A well-known alpine densely 
covered with whitish wool and having at¬ 
tractive, starlike clusters of woolly leaves sur¬ 
rounding small, inconspicuous yellow flowers. 
Splendid for the rock-garden and cf interest 
as the most famous rock-plant from the Euro¬ 
pean Alps. Requires full sun in elevated, well- 
drained position dry in winter. 35 cts. each, 
$3 per doz. 
LIATRIS. 
Pycnostachya. Tall spikes of lavender-lilac 
flowers in late summer. 1-yr. plants only, 
$1.50 per doz. 
LINUM. Flax. 
*Perenne. Beautiful pale blue flowers on slen¬ 
der, graceful stems, with feathery foliage. 
Suitable for dry, sunny borders or rock- 
gardens in sandy or average, well-drained, 
light soil. \ x /i ft. 
LUPINUS. Lupine. 
Stately, beautiful perennials with bold, mas¬ 
sive, 3- to 4-foot spikes of pea-shaped flowers in 
May and June. They require a well-prepared 
garden soil and warm, sheltered, semi-shady 
position. 
Polyphyllus. Clear blue. 
Polyphyllus alba. Pure white. 
Polyphyllus roseus. New. Flowers of beauti¬ 
fully shaded rose. 
MYOSOTIS. Forget-me-not. 
*Palustris semperflorens. Rich blue flowers 
in dainty sprays. A charming, everblooming 
variety that is at home in a shaded border or 
rock-garden or by the waterside. 10 cts. each, 
$1 per doz. 
*Palustris, Pink Beauty. Pink-flowered form 
of the above. 
Field-grown clumps, 25 cts. each, $2 per doz. Pot-grown plants, 15 cts. each, $1.50 per doz., 
except where noted 
