Page Forty-six 
H. A. Hyde Company 
ROCK AND ALPINE PLANTS, Continued 
GREVILLEA OBTUSIFOLIA—A neat creep¬ 
ing type; red flowers. A good ground cover 
for banks and terraces. 
HELIANTHEMUM “Attraction” — Very 
dwarf plant, flowers yellow and orange. 
Also many other colors. 
JASMINUM PARKERII — Dwarf compact 
Jasmine. Yellow flowers. 
$.35 each. $3.50 per dozen. 
LITHOSPERMUM PROSTRATUM — 
Heavenly blue. Trailing. Covered pro¬ 
fusely with deep vivid blue flowers. Good 
drainage and acid soil requirements. 
$.60 each. $6.00 per dozen. 
MENTHA REQUIENI—Fragrant mint-like 
compact trailer for part shade. 
PHYTEUMA ORBICULARE—A very pretty 
dwarf alpine. 
POTENTILLA ATROSANGUINEA—Silver- 
gray strawberry like foliage and deep red 
flowers. Very fine. 
PRUNELLA WEBBIANA — Low creeping 
plant; lilac flowers and dark foliage. 
ROSA ROULETTI — Dwarf Alpine Rose. 
Flowers double pink. Should be in every 
rock garden. 
$.50 each. $5.00 dozen. 
Large plants—$.75 each. $7.50 dozen. 
SEMPERVIVUM—Many varieties. Excellent 
plants for the rockery. 
Special collection of 12 varieties all dif¬ 
ferent $2.00 
STRAWBERRY — Bush Alpine. Amazingly 
prolific. A good border plant. Of non¬ 
running habit. 
TEUCRIUM CHAMAEDRYS — Spreading, 
greyish foliage. Purple flowers. 
TEUCRIUM MARUM — Dwarf graceful 
plants with abundance of rose flowers for 
rock garden or border. 
TEUCRIUM ORIENTALIS—Beautiful blue 
flowering variety. 
THYMES—Many varieties. 
VIOLAS—Many varieties. 
VIOLA ODORATA ROSINA—Pink Violet. 
Flowers deep pink and very fragrant. 
$.15 each. $1.50 dozen. $12.00 per 100. 
We highly recommend to our readers the 
book: 
ROCK GARDENS AND ALPINE PLANTS, 
by H. Correvon. You may choose from 
542 kinds of rock and alpine plants and 
grow the best in your own garden with 
the aid of this famous book. It tells which 
rock plants, native orchids, ferns, and 
hardy cacti are best, how to build, plant 
and maintain rockeries, moraines and wall 
gardens, how to grow all the different 
types of plants, how to acclimatize, etc. 
33 illus. (17 in color), 560 pages. $3.00 
FLOWERING FRUIT TREES 
Among the most showy and satisfactory of our Spring Blossoms are the Flowering Fruit 
Trees. By careful planning in planting your group or row of these, you may have con¬ 
tinuous and delightful color from the first Dawn Apricot in December to the last of the 
Japanese Flowering Cherries in June. The effect is delightful for the Spring Garden and 
affords much cutting for the home. 
DWARF FLOWERING ALMOND — 2 to 3 
foot trees, 75 cents each. $6.50 for 10. 
White—shrubby trees with small double 
white flowers in profusion. Very effec¬ 
tive with branches completely covered 
with a white snowy blanket. 
Pink-—Soft pink flowers in profusion as 
with the white variety. 
FLOWERING APRICOT — DAWN. 75 cents 
each. $6.50 for 10. 
Delightfully rich pink blossoms generally 
flowering late in December. Free flower¬ 
ing. 
FLOWERING PEACHES — 75 cents each. 
$6.50 for 10. 
Early Double Red—Bright scarlet flowers 
very double. 
Late Double Red—A later form of the 
early variety. 
Double Pink—Clara Meyer—Clear deli¬ 
cate pink. Large flowers. 
Double White—A very large double glis¬ 
tening white flower of fine substance. 
FLOWERING CRABAPPLES — $1.00 each. 
$9.00 for 10. 
These trees will give very gay effect to 
your garden of Spring Flowering Trees. 
The colors are exceedingly delicate and 
the trees free flowering. Scarlet and 
crimson fruit during the summer pro¬ 
long the color effect. 
Bechtel’s Crab—Very double delicate pink 
flowers. 
Malus Floribunda—Semi-dwarf Japanese 
Flowering Crabapple. Dwarf habit with 
tendency toward weeping. Lovely rosy- 
pink and white flowers give a charming 
contrasting color effect. 
Malus Purpurea — Rather erect grower 
with purple leaves and bright pink 
flowers followed by pretty red crab- 
apple fruit. 
