ST. EDGWIN. Beautiful soft pink 
flowers, borne in graceful sprays, 
3 feet. 10c. 
SUB-COERULESCENS, (R). Violet 
blue flowers in June and July. 
12-inch stems. Choice cutting 
material. 10c. 
ASTIBLES--SPIREAS 
a plants prefer light shade and must have ample water 
and fertility. Then they will reward with fleecy plumes of various fetching- 
pink shades. 2 feet. 25c each. 
AMERICA. Deep pink. RUEBENS. Deep rose. 
QUEEN ALEXANDRA. Light pink. PRINCESS MARY. Soft pink. 
AUBRIETIAS---“ROCK CRESS” 
All Especially Fine for the Rockery 
AUBRIETIA, (R). New large-flow¬ 
ered hybrids. The range of color 
includes lavender purple, mauve, 
rose and crimson. Plant with 
your double Arabis and pale yel¬ 
low alyssum, or let the Aubrietia 
fall over the rocks in colorful 
curtains. Trailing. 10c. 
AUBRIETIA BOUGAINVILLAE, 
(R). A delightful rosy mauve 
shade, calling to mind that gor¬ 
geous vine of the tropics, from 
which this Aubrietia takes its 
name. 15c. 
AUBRIETIA, “Crimson King.” (R). 
The richest of its color yet at- 
tained 15c 
AUBRIETIA HENDERSONII, (R). 
A rich violet color, with large 
flowers. 15c. 
AURICULA. (See Primulas). 
BELLIS PERENNIS, (R). Old-fash¬ 
ioned quilled daisy, bright cher¬ 
ry red, shading to white in cen¬ 
ter. Very quaint and free flow¬ 
ering. 3 inches. 10c. 
BELLIUM MINIUTUM, (R). Tiny 
daisy from Greece. It blooms for 
weeks at a time. 3 inches. 10c. 
BETONICA GRANDIFLORA, (R). 
Rather coarse but effective. 
Light magenta flowers. 15 
inches. 15c. 
BLEEDING HEART. (See Dicentra 
Spectablis). 
CALAMINTHA ALPINA, (R). All 
summer long the small violet 
flowers adorn the slender shoots 
of this easily grown plant. 8 
inches. 10c. 
CAMPANULA BELLFLOWER 
CAMPANULA BELLARDI MIRAN- 
DI, (R). A novelty with bells of 
silvery blue. Very profuse flow¬ 
ering. 3 inches. 25c. 
CAMPANULA CALYCANTHEMA, 
Pink. The ever-popular “cup and 
saucer” Canterbury Bell. 10c. 
$1.00 per dozen. 
CAMPANULA CARPATICA 
GRANDIFLORA, (R). Free- 
flowering, robust and good look¬ 
ing. The variety offered is soft 
blue. Deserves generous plant¬ 
ing. 10c. 
CAMPANULA CARPATICA, “Isa¬ 
bel,” (R). Extremely large and 
wide-open flowers of light blue. 
15c. 
CAMPANULA CARPATICA, “Riv- 
erslea Beauty,” (R). Much larg¬ 
er than the type, and of slightly 
different form. Please specify 
whether you want blue or white. 
You should have BOTH. 15c. 
CAMPANULA FENESTRELLATA, 
(R). Of delightful trailing hab¬ 
it, equally at home in rock gar¬ 
den or wall. Medium, blue in 
shade—flowers star, rather than 
bell shaped. 15c. 
CAMPANULA GLOMERATA, (R). 
Shakes its deep purple bells 
from stems a foot tall. Blooms 
in June. 15c. 
CAMPANULA “Josephine.” We have 
not the botanical name of this, 
but that does not detract from 
its beauty. A symmetrical bush 
2 feet high, covered with erectly 
borne bells of lavender blue. The 
legend is that it originated in the 
Empress Josephine’s garden. 15c. 
9 
