A Few of Our Outstanding Plants 
BORDER 
Anemone japonica. 
Alba, Queen Charlotte, Rubra, Whirlwind. 
Delphinium. 
Blackmore and Langdon strain of English 
Doubles; Hoodacres’ Pearl Necklace, Velvabee 
and other glistening whites; Lyondel’s hand- 
pollinated, unexcelled either in size or in color. 
Dictamnus fraxinella. 
Gas Plant—Both pink and white. 
Gypsophila. 
Bristol Fairy. 
Pacifica. 
Finest of the Baby’s Breaths. 
Dainty soft pink flowers. 
Hemerocallis. 
Cinnabar, Ophir, Todmordeni, Vesta; other 
varieties equally striking. 
No plant of the garden gives more or asks 
less. 
Japanese Iris. 
Oriental Poppies. 
40 varieties of this superb Iris. 
10 varieties, including Beauty of Livermore, 
Lulu A. Neeley, Princess Victoria Louise and 
Perry’s White. 
Phlox. 
More than 50 varieties. Elizabeth Campbell, 
E. I. Farrington, Columbia, Daily Sketch, 
Saladin and many more as distinct and colorful. 
ROCK GARDEN 
Androsace primuloides. 
Lovely Alpine. Silky gray rosettes with charm¬ 
ing pink blossoms in May. 
Daphne cneorum. 
Evergreen, well known for the spicy fragrance 
of its soft pink flowers. 
Gentiana lagodechiana. 
Trailing deep blue gentian, enchanting with 
its long season of bloom. 
Geum borisi. 
If thrills were color, ’twould describe the bril¬ 
liant orange-scarlet of Borisi flowers. 
Helleborus niger. 
Christmas Rose. The pink-tinged buds of this 
prized little evergreen are now (Feb. 2) opening 
into Single white roses, waxy as the Water Lily. 
Iris gracilipes. 
Nierembergia rivularis. 
Most fragile and orchid-like of all Irises. 
From June to October a continuous stream of 
sparkling white cups. 
Wahlenbergia dalmatica. Pendant clusters of violet bells adorn this tufty 
little flower of the wall. 
