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Perennial Plants 
PEONIES 
EDULIS SUPERBA Bright rose-pink. Very fragrant. Early. 
Usually called the Decoration Day Peony. 
Excellent cut flower variety. Price, 50 cents each. 
FELIX CROUSSE Rich, red. Large, globular flowers are a rich, 
brilliant, effective red. Rose type. Late mid¬ 
season. Price, 75 cents each. 
FESTIVA MAXIMA White. Extra large rose type. Pure white 
with carmine deckings in the center. Fra¬ 
grant ; early ; most popular all-white Peony. Price, 50 cents each. 
BARONESS SCHROEDER Flesh-white. Plume-shaped flower with 
irregularly shaped petals. Fragrant; 
strong, tall grower and free bloomer. Midseason. Regarded as one 
of the world’s best white Peonies. Price, $1.00 each. 
KARL ROSEFIELD Semi-rose type; midseason. Very tall com¬ 
pact grower of stately habit and an A-l 
bloomer. Every shoot has a flower of rich velvety crimson : a per¬ 
fect ball; very brilliant and striking. The outstanding red at the 
1926 Peony Show. Price, 75 cents each. 
OFFICINALIS RUBRA Medium sized deep crimson flowers, in 
great profusion. One of the oldest and 
best varieties; the earliest sort to come into bloom. This is the 
“piney” of your grandmother’s garden and its color cannot be sur¬ 
passed by any of its newer rivals. Price, 75 cents each. 
MME EMILE CALLE Shell pink. Large, compact, flat flowers 
of the rose type. Milkwhite center. Free 
and reliable bloomer. Late. Price, 75 cents each. 
M. JULES ELIE The flowers are of immense size, globular in form. 
The color is glistening lilac-pink, shading to 
deeper rose at the base. The whole flower is overlaid with a sheen 
of silver. One of the best cut flowers, being a splendid keeper. 
Price, 75c each. 
Old-Fashioned Carden Peonies 
ROSEA Deep Cerise-pink. Price, 50 cents each. 
ALBA Pure white ; large flower. Price, 50 cents each. 
RUBRA Deep crimson; early. Price, 50 cents each. 
One each red, AA 
white and pink for 
S e d u m 
15c each; 12 for $1.25 
ACRE (Golden Moss.) Much used for covering graves; foliage 
green; flowers bright yellow; prostrate and slowly 
spreading. 
AIZOON Bright yellow flowers. 1 foot. July and August. 
Rock Garden Plants 
$1.50 per dozen 
ALLIUM Low-growing bulbous plant, with grass-like leaves. The 
flowers are borne in globular heads during June and 
July. The color is a beautiful shade of mauve lilac. Grows in a 
sunny place. 20 cents each. 
ALYSSUM Saxatile compactum. Broad masses of bright yellow 
flowers in early spring. An excellent plant for the 
rockery or front of borders. 1 foot. 20 cents each. 
ARENARIA Montana. Close tufts, profusely covered with small 
silvery-white flowers quite early in the season. Ex¬ 
cellent as an edging plant in formal gardens and for rockeries in 
sunny places. Flowers resemble small white upturned morning 
glories. May. 20 cents each. 
ARMENIA Laucheana. Bright rosy red. 3 to 6 inches. May- 
June. Attractive dwarf plants that will succeed in 
any soil, forming evergreen tufts of bright green foliage from 
which innumerable flowers appear in dense heads on stiff, wiry 
stems from 9 to 12 inches high. They flower more or less continu¬ 
ously from early spring until late in the fall. 20 cents each. 
AUBRIETIA One of the daintiest and most delicately beautiful of 
all dwarf, creeping plants for carpeting beds or 
rockeries, forming brilliant sheets of violet, crimson or rose for 
many weeks. Massed on rockeries or in borders with white Arabis 
and yellow Alyssum, it forms a charming contrast. A gem for 
planting in crevices of rocks or wall, forming a cataract of color. 
20 cents each. 
CAMPANULA Carpatica. A pretty species growing in compact 
tufts not exceeding 8 inches high; flowers clear 
blue, held erect on wiry stems. It begins blooming in June, con¬ 
tinuing until October. As an edging for hardy border or for the 
rockery it is unsurpassed. 20 cents each. 
CERASTIUM Tomentosum. A low-growing plant having silvery 
white foliage and producing an abundance of 
snow-white flowers. 20 cents. 
DIANTHUS Deltoides (Maiden Pink). A beautiful little plant 
with narrow leaves, and bearing a profusion of 
small crimson flowers during June and July. 15 cents each. 
CEUM Mrs. Bradshaw. A splendid new variety, with large double 
flowers of a fiery red, blooming nearly all summer. 18 
inches. 20 cents. 
CYPSOPHILA Repens. A beautiful trailing plant for the rock¬ 
ery, with clouds of small pink flowers in July and 
August. 20 cents each. 
HELIANTHEMUM (Rock or Sun Rose). Low-growing evergreen 
plants, forming broad clumps, and which 
during their flowering season (July to September), are hidden by 
a mass of bloom. Various colors, including white, yellow, orange 
and pink. 20 cents each. 
HEUCHERA Sanguines (Coralbells). Beautiful plants for front 
row of borders, with slender, fairy-like spikes of 
richly colored flowers : most striking in the garden, light and grace¬ 
ful for cutting. Excellent in wall or rock garden, 12 to 18 inches. 
June to September. Flowers bright crimson; very free-flowering. 
20 cents each. 
Hardy 
AIZOON VARIEGATED Beautiful white and green striped foli¬ 
age. Yellow flowers. 
BRILLIANT One the prettiest erect-growing species, attain¬ 
ing a height of 18 inches, with broad light green 
foliage and immense heads of handsome showy amaranth red col¬ 
ored flowers ; indispensable as a late fall-blooming plant. 
EVERSII A nice variety of sub-trailing habit. Foliage is glaucous 
gray. Rose colored flowers. 
KAMTSCHATICUM Orange-yellow flowers with prostrate green 
foliage turning yellow in autumn. 
LYDIUM Bronzy-green foliage; pink flowers. 
PUCHELLIUM Very dark green foliage; yellow flowers. 
REFLECTUM Dwarf and spreading; thick, waxy, round foliage; 
white flowers. Good rock plant. 
Excellent dwarf variety for rockeries or bor¬ 
der edging. The best sedum for filling seams 
between rocks in wall garden ; rapid grower. 
SARMENTOSUM 
STOLONIFERUM Most desirable; evergreen leaves: flowers pur¬ 
plish pink. Excellent for rock gardens. 
POTENTILLA Charming plants for the border, with brilliant sin¬ 
gle or double flowers that are produced in pro¬ 
fusion from June to August. This is the improved salmon-pink 
“formosa.” Very free flowering. 20 cents each. 
SAPONARIA (Soap Wort). A useful plant for the rockery or 
border, producing from May to August masses of 
attractive bright rose flowers ; 8 inches. 20 cents each. 
TUNICA Saxifraga (Coat Flower). A pretty tufted plant with 
light pink flowers, produced all summer. Useful either 
for the rockery or the border. 20 cents each. 
VITTADENIA (Santa Barbara Daisy) numerous small daisy-like 
flowers, white, pinkish backs, for rock gardens. 
Six to eight inches high. 15 cents each. 
VERONICA Rupestris. A fine rock plant growing 3 to 4 inches 
high; thickly matted, deep green foliage, hidden in 
early June under a cloud of bright blue flowers. 15 cents each. 
ZEPHYRANTHUS Rosea (Zephyr Flower or Fairy Lilies). Beau¬ 
tiful, dwarf, bulbous plant, very effective for 
massing in the border, flowering with great profusion during the 
summer. They are also suitable for pot culture and rock garden. 
Large rose colored. 15 cents each, 6 for 75 cent*, 12 for $1.25. 
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