STUMPP & WALTER CO., NEW YORK CITY 
PHYSOSTEGIA (False Dragonhead) 
Virginica. One of the prettiest hardy perennials, forming dense bushes, 3 to 4 feet 
high, and bearing freely during the summer months spikes of delicate lilac tubu¬ 
lar flowers not unlike a gigantic heather. Pkt. 10 cts., Xoz. 75 cts. 
Virginica alba. White. Height 4 feet. Pkt. 15 cts., Koz. $1. 
PLATYCODON 
Balloon Flower; Japanese Bellflower 
One of the best hardy perennials, producing very showy flowers during the whole season. 
They form large clumps and are excellent for planting in permanent borders or among shrubbery. 
Easily raised from seed; begin blooming in August if sown outdoors in April. 
Gra,ndiflOTum. Large steel-blue flowers. 
Grandiflorum album. Pure white variety. 
Grandiflorum Mariesii. Large, open, bell-shaped flowers of a rich 
violet-blue; plant dwarf and compact. 
Grandiflorum japonicum fl.-pl. (Double Japanese Bellflower). Large, 
glossy, deep blue flowers. The inner petals alternate with the outer ones, 
giving the flower the appearance of a ten-pointed blue star.. 5 pkts. $: 
Pkt. 
Koz. 
$0 10 
$0 
75 
15 
I 
50 
25 
2 
00 
Hoz. 
25 
$2 
50 
POLEMONIUM 
Jacob’s Ladder 
Popular hardy perennial border plant, 
with bell-shaped flowers nearly i inch 
across. 2 feet. Flowersfrom May to July. 
Cseruleum grandiflorum. Deep 
blue. Pkt. 10 cts., Xoz. 50 cts. 
Cseruleum album. Pure white. Pkt. 
10 cts., Xoz. 50 cts. 
Richardsonil. Sky-blue. Pkt. 10 cts., 
}4oz. 50 cts. 
Pkt. J^oz. 
Alba. Pure white.|o 10 lo 50 
Aurea. Deep golden yellow.... 10 50 
Rosea. Beautiful rose. 10 50 
Pkt. H'oz. 
Splendens. Crimson . $0 10 $0 50 
Finest Mixed . Oz.$i.. 10 30 
DOUBLE GRANDIFLORA 
Alba. White.$o'"io $^75 
Rosea. Rose. 10 75 i 25 
Salmonea. Salmon. ... 10 75 i 25 
Splendens. Crimson. 
Sulphurea. Yellow.. 
Finest Mixed. 
Pkt. ykiz. 
$0 10 $0 75 
10 75 
10 60 
t<oz. 
25 
I 25 
I 00 
PUERARIA THUNBERGIANA 
Japanese Kudzu Vine 
To this must be awarded first place as the fastest-grpwing hafdy climbing plant. It will grow 
8 to 10 feet the first year from seed, and after it ha^ becbijje-established there seems to be no 
limit to its growth, 50 feet in a single season being not unusual. 'Its foliage is large and covers 
well. It bears small racemes of rosy purple, pea-shaped blossoms toward the close of August. _ _ a , 
A splendid subject for permanently covering verandas, dead trees, etc. Pkt. 10 cts., J^oz. 30 cts. Platycodon grandiflorum japonicum fl.-pl. 
Physostegia 
GIANT 
POTENTILLA (Cinquefoil) 
Charming plants for the mixed 
border, producing brilliant flowers. 
Will thrive in almost any soil provided 
the situation is sunny. 
Argentea calabra. Hardy perennial, 
producing yellow flowers during sum¬ 
mer. Height 18 inches. 
Nepalensis (formosa). Hardy peren¬ 
nial. Red. Height 18 inches. 
Miss Willmott. Hardy perennial. 
Rose. Height 6 inches. 
Each, pkt. 25c., Vgoz. 75c., V 4 OZ. $1.25 
PORTULACA S'-" 
_ Plant 
One of our finest annual plants, of 
easy culture, thriving best in a rather 
rich, light loam or sandy soil, and luxu¬ 
riating in an exposed sunny situation. Portulaca 
The flowers are of the richest colors and 
are produced throughout the summer in great profusion. Fine for massing in beds, edgings on 
rockwork, and frequently used to sow broadcast over sunny banks, etc. In any case, it is well to 
mix the seed with three or four times its bulk of dry sand or soil, which permits of even and easy 
distribution. Height 6 inches, 
SINGLE GRANDIFLORA 
POLYANTHUS 
Primula elatior 
The visitor to any of the famous gar¬ 
dens of England in May-time is greatly 
impressed with the manner in which 
this beautiful Primrose is used and the 
gorgeous display the better varieties 
present. Many of the larger gardens 
use them to intersperse between May¬ 
flowering tulips in their bulb-gardens, 
but they are best seen to advantage in 
borders or in beds. The strain we are 
offering is of strong, sturdy habit, and 
bears immense trusses of large flowers 
on strong stems 10 inches in length. 
The colors vary from pure white to rich 
wallflower-red. Seed is usually sown in 
early summer, in a frame, and the 
plants transplanted to the garden in the 
autumn. They require slight protection 
over winter. Pkt. 25 cts., 5 pkts. $1, 
^z. $1.50, yioz. 
$2.50. 
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