THE FREMONT NURSERY, FREMONT, OHIO 
31 
JAPAN IRIS 
German or Orchid-Flowered Fleur do Lis, blooms 
in May and June. 10c each: $1.00 per dozen. 
ALBERT VICTOR—Deep blue. 
CANARY BIRD—Falls creamy white, uppers 
light canary-yellow; medium sized (lowers. 
CELESTE—Falls bright blue, uppers delicate 
grayish blue; all having a levender effect. 
CHERION— Pinkish, falls streaked with red, 
nearest red iris. 
DARIUS—A pleasing shade of yellow, falls blue 
FLORENTINE ALBA—-Very early, largo white. 
HONORABLE—Golden yellow standards, falls 
rich crimson brown. 
IVORINE—Very large, extra early white. 
JOHAN DEWITT -Standards bluish violet : falls 
dcrp violet purple veined with white. 
MAD. PAQUETTE—Reddish purple. 
PALLIDA ALBERT VICTOR—Very large late 
light lavender blue. Exceptionally fine. Tall. 
ORIENTALIS SNOW QUEEN—An exquisite 
hardy Iris: (lowers of a snowy whiteness, large 
ir,d well formed, produced in great abundance. 
Foljage light and graceful. A gem for flower 
(order or ^'alerside, 2 to 3 feet high. 10c each; 
fl.00 per dozen. 
IRIS SIBERICA—Purplish blue, 3 feet high, 
ve ^7 desirable. June. 10c each; $1.00 per doz. 
IRIS PSEUDO ACORUS—Bright yellow. May 
ard June. Does best in wet places. 10c each; 
11-00 per dozen. 
JAPAN IRIS—Finest of all the Iris family. 
The flowers are of immense size, from six to 
r eht inches in diameter, and of the most beau¬ 
'll end delicate shades. They are perfectly 
*-»rdy. and flower in great profusion during 
1 * n# * and July. A well established plant given 
- dozen or more flower stalks two to three feet 
. each stalk producing two to four enormous 
h looms. 
" rl *' r hr color or.lv. Royal Purple. Mottled Blue, 
Lavender. White, all 25c each; $2.50 per doz. 
UATRIS (Blazing Star or Gay Feather) 
• Showy and attractive, succeeding any¬ 
where, producing long spikes of rosy purplish 
flowers from July till fall. Spikes throe to four 
feet high. 
LYCHNIS 
CHALCEDONICA—A most desirable plant, 
heads of brilliant orango-scarlet, grows 2 to 3 
feet high and blooms all summer. 
VISCARIA, DOUBLE RED—Form a dense tuft 
of evergreen foliage, and in Juno sonds up spikes 
of handsome, double, deep red, fragrant (lowers, 
remaining in perfection for six weeks. Juno and 
July. 
MONARDA DIDYMA 
CAMBRIDGE SCARLET—Bushy, coarse-leaved 
plant, growing about two foot high; covered 
with round, full heads of red flowers. The Mon* 
erdas are well known as “Bergamot,” “Os¬ 
wego Tea,” “Mint,” etc., on account of tho 
delicious fragrance of their leaves when crushed, 
this particular variety being an exceedingly 
showy scarlet and one of the freest blooming 
hardv plants of any color. 
LINUM 
PERENE—Foliage is lino and gracoful, with 
(lowers shaped like thoso of Phlox. Blooms all 
summer. Clear delicate light blue. 
ORNAMENTAL GRASSES 
EULALIA GRACILIS UNVITATA—This plant 
is of most graceful habits and is very useful for 
decorating purposes. The host ornamental grass 
in cultivation. 
EULALIA JAPONICA ZEBRINA (Zebra Grass) 
—Leaves crossed every two or three inches by 
a hand of yellow half an inch wide. 
EULALIA JAPONICA VARIEGATED—Long, 
narrow leaves, striped with groon and white. 
PYRETHRUM HYBRIDUM 
PAINTED DAISIES—Red. white and pink, 
blooms in Juno and July; a most beautiful, har¬ 
dy plant. Long season of bloom. 
PLATYCODON 
GRANDIFLORUM (Balloon Flower)—Blooms 
PLATYCODON 
