All plants in this catalog, unless otherwise noted, will be supplied in quantity as follows: 
25 cts. each at $2.50 per doz., $15 per 100 35 cts. each at $3.50 per doz., $25 per 100 
30 cts. each at $3.00 per doz., $20 per 100 40 cts. each at $4.00 per doz., $30 per 100 
Not less than 6 plants of one variety will be sold at the dozen rate, nor less than 25 plants of one variety at 
the 100 rate. Orders for less than 6 plants will be charged at the rate of single plants. 
Achillea (Milfoil, or Yarrow) 
# Plants suitable for dry, sunny places. The dwarf 
kinds are useful for carpeting or for rockeries, the 
taller varieties as border plants. 
MILLEFOLIUM, Cerise Queen. A new variety. 
Dark red; an improvement on Rosea. 25 cts. 
Millefolium Kelwayi. An improved variety, 
with flowers of deep carmine-red, with white eye; 
very handsome. 25 cts. 
EUPATORIUM (syn. Filipendulina). Flat heads 
of brilliant yellow flowers; finely cut foliage. Blooms 
all summer. 4 feet. 25 cts. 
PTARMICA, Boule de Neige. New. An im¬ 
provement on “The Pearl,” with fuller and more 
perfect flowers. 30 cts. 
Ptarmica, Perry’s White. A new variety, with 
large, pure white flowers; finest of all. 30 cts. 
Ptarmica, The Pearl. Pure white, double 
flowers all summer. Prized for cutting. 25 cts. 
TOMENTOSA (Woolly Yarrow). A very dwarf 
variety, with finely cut, dark green foliage, and 
numerous flat heads of bright yellow flowers in June. 
An elegant rock-plant. 25 cts. 
Aconitum (Monkshood) 
Summer- and late autumn-flowering plants with 
bold spikes of hood-shaped flowers, thriving in 
either sun or shade. The roots are poisonous and 
should not be planted where the tubers might be 
mistaken for vegetables. 
35 cts. each, $3.50 per doz. 
FISCHERI. A dwarf variety, with pale blue 
flowers. 18 inches. September. 
NAPELLUS. Dark blue flowers are borne freely 
in August and September. 
Napellus bicolor. Handsome blue and white 
flowers; blooms at same time as other sorts. 
SPARKS’ VARIETY. The darkest in color. 
Flowers glistening violet-blue; branching spikes. 
5 to 6 feet. 
Alyssum (Rock Madwort) 
Saxatile compactum. Broad masses of bright 
yellow flowers in early spring. An excellent plant 
for the rockery or front of borders. 1 foot. 25 cts. 
Anchusa (Alkanet) 
For producing a mass effect of brilliant blue, the 
Anchusas cannot be surpassed. Dropmore, the 
darkest one, is more effective than Perry’s Variety, 
which is too straggly in habit. Opal has larger 
flowers and is the best of the tall varieties, produc¬ 
ing a solid sheet of soft turquoise-blue. They should 
be treated as biennials, as the old plants exhaust 
themselves at the end of two or three years. They 
reproduce themselves, however, from self-sown 
seed. The blooming season can be extended for 
several weeks by cutting the spikes as soon as the 
flowers fade, thus preventing seeding. 
DROPMORE VARIETY. Tall spikes of beau¬ 
tiful blue flowers, flowering all summer. Rough, 
broad foliage. 5 to 6 feet. 30 cts. 
OPAL. New. Very beautiful variety, with large 
pale blue flowers. 3 to 4 feet. 30 cts. 
MYOSOTIDIFLORA. A very beautiful and 
distinct, new, dwarf perennial variety from Russia, 
with clusters of charming blue flowers resembling 
forget-me-nots. An effective rock-plant for shady 
places. 1 foot. 40 cts. 
Anemone (windflower) 
HUPEHENSIS. A new species from central 
China, resembling Anemone japonica in growth, but 
not so tall. Pale mauve-colored flowers appear in 
early August and continue until late fall. 1 foot. 
30 cts. 
PENNSYLVANICA. Our native Windflower, 
producing large, white flowers from June to August 
in great profusion. Succeeds in sun or shade. 25 cts. 
Anthemis (Marguerite) 
TINCTORIA. Handsome, finely cut foliage, and 
large, golden yellow flowers produced all summer. 
Succeeds in the poorest soil. 25 cts. 
Aquilegia (Columbine) 
These are old garden favorites, and few plants 
look better or thrive so well in woodlands or in 
shady corners where most plants cannot grow. 
The new hybrids, most of them having unusually 
long slender spurs, with the most varied and delicate 
combinations of color, are exquisitely beautiful. 
I have become greatly interested in them and have 
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