HARDY PERENNIALS—Continued 
♦Asterisk indicates plants tliat are suitable for rock garden planting. 
Blazing Star or Gray Feather 
Pycnostachya — Hardy perennial that 
grows m any soil. Has a stout stalk of rich 
purple flowers. 4 to 6 feet. Blooms in mid¬ 
summer. Excellent cut flowers. 
UINUM 
♦PerennJ—-Attractive foliage. Beautiful 
pale blue flowers on slender, graceful stems. 
Perenne alba—White form of the above. 
*Flava Compacta Nana—Fine variety of 
showy transparent yellow blooms. 
Phlox 
All Perennials on this page are Prepaid. 20c each; 3 for 50c; 6 for 90c. 
Rock Garden Bargain 
Ajnga 
Calamintha 
Catananche Cupids Dart 
Delphinium Chinese 
Dianthus 
One each of the five Rock Garden 
plants. All for 75c prepaid 
LYCHNIS 
Campion 
♦Alpina —Rose-pink. Very neat dwarf 
rock plant. 
Chalcedonica —Maltese Cross. Vivid scar¬ 
let flowers blooming all summer. A bright 
plant for the hardy border. 3 feet. 
LYTHRUM 
Purple Loosestripe 
Roseum —Grows 2 to 5 feet under varied 
cultivation. The purple flowers are borne 
freely in long terminal racemes from June 
to September. 
Perennial Flax 
Peony 
PEONIES 
Now Is the Ideal Time to Plant 
All 7 Varieties of Peonies for $2.50, prepaid. 
Festiva Maxima —Large globular flowers. 
Pure white flecked with crimson. Extra 
early. Fine for cutting. 25c. 
Mons. Jules Elie —A gorgeous peony of 
enormous size. Glossy lilac-pink shading 
to a deeper rose. The entire flower overlaid 
with a silver sheen. An old favorite and 
one of the best. 25c. 
Baroness Schroeder —Late. White with 
shadings of flesh. This is one of the finest 
Jreonies; freely produced, lasting a long 
time. Very fragrant. 45c. 
Le Cygne —Very large, perfectly formed 
flower, freely produced. The finest white. 75c. 
Felix Crousse —Very brilliant red. . Medi¬ 
um to large, globular, typical bomb shape, 
fragrant; strong growth, mid-season. 25c. 
Therese —Charming shade of violet-rose, 
changing to lilac-white. Develops a high 
crown; strong grower and very free bloom¬ 
er. 50c. 
Karl Rosenfield —Very large flower; glob¬ 
ular, semi-rose type. Extremely vigorous 
grower, tall, and free-flowering. An early 
red. 25c. 
HEUCHERA 
(Coralbells) 
♦Sanguinea — Bushy 
plants of easy culture 
bearing loose graceful 
spikes of flowers. Crim¬ 
son Bells. Excellent for 
cutting. 
HIBISCUS 
Mallow —A bout one 
hundred and fifty to two 
hundred species are 
known. We are dealing 
here only with the Giant 
Mallow of recent intro¬ 
duction which is a tall 
plant about three to four 
feet high with immense, 
white, pink or red, 
hollyhock-like flowers, 
freely produced during 
the summer. 
IBERIS 
(Hardy Candytuft) 
*Gibraltarica — Large, 
delicate lilac flowers, 
blooming early in 
spring; useful for cut¬ 
ting. May to June. 
♦Sempervirens — Very 
dwarf and covered with 
a sheet of white flowers. 
Fine rock plant. 
LIATRIS 
Uiatris 
