Phlox. 
Elegans Lily. 
Columbine. 
Iris. 
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Pe rennia I FI owers 
For Beauty - Permanence - Pleasure 
PRICES OF ALL PERENNIALS, EXCEPT AS NOTED: 
Not Prepaid—30c each; 3 for 75c; 6 for #1.35; 12 for #2.50. 
Packing and Postage Additional: 10c for one; 12c for 3; 18c for 6; 
25c for 12. 
Our plants are all field grown and freshly dug. You can succeed 
with flowers if you choose from this list. 
BABY’S BREATH. A spray or two of “misty” white Baby’s Breath 
worked into a bouquet with other flowers blends them together in a 
delicate effect that can be obtained in. no other way. 
BALLOON FLOWER. So called from resemblance of the unopened 
flower to a balloon. Two varieties, blue and the white. 
BLEEDING HEARTS. Everyone loves the old-fashioned Bleeding 
Heart that was always found in our grandmothers’ gardens. Comes up 
in early spring and flowers immediately in long racemes of heart' 
shaped pink flowers. 50c each. 
COLUMBINES. Thrive in any garden soil, blooming in May and 
June. Their graceful long spurred flowers rise two feet above the 
beautifully divided foliage. 
CORALBELLS (Heuchera rosea). The mass of crinkly leaves persist 
through the winter. Delicate racemes of tiny drooping bells of rich 
coral hue are borne aloft on slender stems rising to a height of 18 to 
30 inches. Fine for the border and rock gardens. 
DAISY, SHASTA. Alaska, largest of the Shasta daisy type. 
DAISY, PAINTED. In mixed colors—white, pink and red. Begins 
blooming in June and continues for a long time; very hardy. 
HOLLYHOCKS. Choice new double flowers in mixed colors. The 
tall snikes nicely work into the background in perennial borders. 
IRIS. 
Mrs. Horace Darwin. Large, white, tinged with pink, very fragrant. 
Mme. Chereau. Pure white with clear frilled lavender edge. 
Perfection. Lavender and purple. 
Prosper Laueier. Standards, fiery bronze; falls, reddish purple. 
Sherwin-Wright. The best pure yellow iris. 
Zanardelle. A true blue iris. 
Pumila. Dwarf early blooming iris, deep violet. 
LARKSPUR. These are among our most beautiful flowers. They 
begin flowering in June, and if flower stalks are cut off near the 
ground as soon as thev begin to fade, a second and third crop of 
blooms will be produced before the end of the season. 
Belladonna. Light sky-blue. 
Bellamosa. A dark blue type of Belladonna. 
Wrexham Hvbrids. A strain having the handsomest spikes imagin¬ 
able. Mixed colors. 
LILIES. 
Coral Lily. The bright scarlet flowers are borne in great profusion; 
leaves are fern-like. Fine for mass plantings or for rock gardens. 
Elegans. Mixed tints of orange and red. Blooms in June and July. 
Regal Lilv. One of the most handsome of the hardy lilies. Flowers 
white shading to yellow in center, with pink tinge on outer edges; 
deliciously sweet scented. 
Tiger Lily. Double Tiger Lily, 4 to 6 feet high, bears immense 
numbers of bright orange flowers. 
PEONIES: One of the most dependable flowers. Beautiful as a rose. 
Absolutely hardy. 
Grandiflora. Large blooms of soft pink borne on long stems. Large 
roots, #1.00 each. 
Karl Rosenfield. Dark red; flowers very large, slightly fragrant, long 
stems, good for cut flowers. Early midseason. Strong divisions, 
#1.00 each. 
Mme. de Vernevitle. Large, white, fragrant. Midseason. Large 
divisions. #1.00 each. 
Peonies in Assorted Colors. Red, pink, white—not named. 50c each; 
5 for #2.00. 
PHLOX: This delightful flower gives us striking, brilliant color effects 
in July and August. They show up very effectively when several plants 
of one variety are massed to give a single color in one group, or 
they may be used as single plants. Phlox have been wonderfully 
improved during recent years; the flowers are larger and colors more 
beautiful. We recommend the following as being the best: 
Dr. Chas. H. Mayo. White with crimson eye. 
Frederick Passy. Mauve, delicate purple. 
Jules Sandeau. Large flowers, deep salmon-pink. 
Miss Lingard. The only phlox which blooms from June till October; 
white. 
R. P. Struthers. Rosy carmine with claret eye. 
Rijnstroom. Large heads of rosy pink. 
Von Hochberg. Deep brilliant red. 
Von Lassburg. Large flowers ot pure white. 
SEDUM. In variety. Just the thing for rock gardens or for dry 
slopes where other things fail to grow. 
YUCCA. Evergreen foliage; flower stalks 3 to 4 feet high, bear 
branching spikes of bell-shaped flowers. 
YUCCA, Variegated Leaved. A novel form of above, new and strik¬ 
ing. 75c each; 2 for #1.25. 
Bleeding Heart. 
Coralbells.* 
Hollyhock. 
Larkspur 
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