HARDY PERENNIAL COLLECTIONS 
These two Collections oi Perennials are made up of fine, strong, dependable plants that will flower the first season after 
they are planted. Each Collection is a complete hardy garden, consisting of plants of various heights, colors, and flowering 
periods, which will insure a profusion of bloom throughout the season. Either is a splendid investment that will bring 
returns in ever-increasing plant and floral delights each season for years to come. 
Collection of 50 Plants, $8 
For descriptions of varieties, consult Catalogue 
Key Key 
1. 4 Aquilegia. 1 ft. 7. 5 Geum. 1 ft. 
2. 3 Coreopsis. 2 ft. 8. 4 Heliopsis pitcheriana. 2 ft. 
3. 5 Delphinium belladonna. 1 Vi ft. 9. 4 Iris, German. 2 ft. 
4. 4 Stokesia. 1 ft. 10. 6 Phlox. 2 ft. 
5. 3 Dianthus plumarius. 1ft. 11. 4 Rudbeckia purpurea. 2 ft. 
6. 4 Gaillardia. 1 Vi ft. 12. 4 Veronica longifolia subsessilis. 2 ft. 
On this page there is one plan for each 
Collection, with dimensions and key 
numbers, showing where to place the 
different varieties according to their 
height. The number after each variety 
indicates the approximate distance the 
Collection of 100 Plants, $15 
For descriptions of varieties, consult Catalogue 
Key 
Key 
1. 4 Stokesia. 1 ft. 
2. 3 Anchusa italica. 2 Vi ft. 
3. 6 Aquilegia. 1 ft. 
4. 3 Artemisia lactiflora. 2 ft. 
5. 5 Chrysanthemum. 2 ft. 
6. 6 Delphinium belladonna. 1 Vi ft. 
7. 5 Dianthus plumarius. 1 ft. 
8. 4 Pentstemon. 2 ft. 
9. 6 Gaillardia. 1 Vi ft. 
10. 6 Geum. 1 ft. 
11. 4 Hardy Aster. 2Vift. 
12. 4 Heliopsis pitcheriana 
13. 4 Hollyhocks. 2 Vi ft. 
14. 4 Matricaria, Golden Ball 
15. 5 Platycodon. 1 Vi ft. 
16. 8 Phlox. 2 ft. 
17. 5 Pyre thrum. 1 Vi ft. 
18. 6 Sedum spectabile. 1 Vi ft. 
19. 4 Valeriana officinalis. 2 ft. 
20. 8 Veronica longifolia subsessilis. 
plants should be placed apart. 
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ROCK-GARDEN PLANTS and Collection 
T HE growing of alpine plants is probably the most highly specialized form of outdoor gardening. It is a fascinating 
pastime because of the intrinsic beauty of the miniature perennials as well as the real difficulties encountered in making 
them happy away from their mountain homes. The wise gardener will not be in too much of a hurry to assemble an 
expensive collection of tricky alpines. He will proceed more slowly, developing the broad outlines of his garden and furnish¬ 
ing it, as it were, with plants which are easy to grow and are known to be adapted to his local conditions. In the friendly 
setting provided by such congenial plants he may then venture into the more esthetic grounds of the high alpines. 
In the list on this page we have tried to gather together varieties of genuine rock-garden merit, the kind of thing that 
everybody depends on for the broad, general, well-furnished garden-effect, and which can be depended on to thrive year 
after year without too much bothersome care. Here are low, mat-forming plants which may be allowed to drape themselves 
over difficult rock-joints or to cover level patches and cracks between stepping-stones. There are some trailers which will 
droop artistically over large boulders or run along the edge of a curbing, and may at times be useful for covering bare spots 
where earlier blooming plants may have disappeared. There are also interesting little tufted plants for tucking into the 
protected corners or placing at points where minor accent effects are needed. 
The point is that these are all dependable plants. They are true citizens of the rock-garden and belong there. Such a 
collection as this is bound to make a fine effect in a brand-new rockery whether anything else is planted or not, and they 
are indispensable to the good appearance of older collections. 
Ajuga reptans. Evergreen ground-cover with 
bronzy foliage. Flowers blue, in 8-inch spikes. 
Anchusa myosotidiflora. Big, heart-shaped 
leaves. Flowers blue like forget-me-nots. 
Grows about a foot high and as much across. 
Armeria laucheana. Flat, cushion-like 
plant with grassy foliage and small heads 
of rosy crimson flowers on tall, slender stems. 
Arabis alpina. Gray-leaved ground-cover 
plant of rapid growth, submerged in spring 
under 6-inch spikes of dazzling white flowers. 
Cerastium tomentosum. A quick-growing, 
matted plant with gray-white foliage and a 
mantle of starry white flowers in late spring. 
Dianthus caesius. Closely woven mat of 
gray-green, grassy foliage surmounted by 
fragrant, fringed pink flowers on slender 
stems in midsummer. 
Collection of Rock-Garden Plants 
Iberis, Little Gem. A half-shrubby little 
tuft with evergreen foliage and sprays of 
snowy white flowers in early spring. • 
Nepeta mussini. Gray, aromatic trailer 
with velvety foliage and clusters of pale 
lavender-blue flowers in summer. 
Phlox subulata. A mat of mossy, almost 
spiny, foliage covered in early spring with 
a blanket of brilliant rose-pink flowers. 
Physostegia virginiana, Vivid. A striking 
plant for late summer bloom. The strong 
stalks grow about 2 feet high, bearing huge 
spikes of deep rosy violet flowers. 
Primula veris. Rosette-like plants with 
evergreen foliage and sprays of tiny yellow 
flowers in early spring. 
Santolina chamaecyparissus. An aro¬ 
matic, shrubby plant with gray foliage, 
growing about 1 foot high. The yellow 
flowers are inconspicuous. 
Sedum. A vast family of indispensable 
plants. We offer three distinct varieties. 
Thymus serpyllum coccineus. A splen¬ 
did, mat-like creeper with sweetly aro¬ 
matic foliage and tiny purple-crimson 
flowers in midsummer. 
Tunica saxifraga. Grassy tufts about 6 
inches high, with small pinkish white 
flowers borne aloft on thread-like stems 
throughout the entire season. 
Veronica repens. An excellent evergreen 
creeper with small, deep green foliage, from 
which rise 6-inch spikes of exquisite, 
lavender-blue flowers in June. 
$ 8.50 
COLLECTION 
3 each of the above varieties (48 plants) 
For prices of separate varieties, consult Catalogue 
