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ELLWANOER & BARRY'S CATALOGUE. 
HEPATICA. Liver Leaf. 
Very effective and charming spring flowering 
perennials. 
H. triloba. Round-lobed Hepatica. 
Flowers blue, purple, or almost white. 
HESPERIS. 
H. mat ro nalis il. albo pleno. Double¬ 
flowering Rocket. One of the finest hardy 
herbaceous plants, with spikes of clear white flow¬ 
ers from 10 to 18 inches long; very fragrant. 
Jtine. 30 cents. 
HEPATICA TRILOBA. 
HIERACIUM. Hawkweed. 
H. aurantiacum. Deep orange-red flowers; 1 foot. June 
HIBISCUS. Rose Mallow. 
The Hibiscus are among the ’argest and most showy of herbaceous plants. 
II. grandiflorus albiis. Large, showv, white flowers in August: 4 to 5 
feet. ’ ’ 
H. grandiflorus roseus. Large, showy, rose flowers in August: 4 to 5 
feet. 
HYPERICUM. St. John’s Wort. 
H. calycinum. A very showy, trailing shrub; flowers bright vellow; all 
summer ; 12 inches. 50 cents. 
HYSSOPUS. Hyssop. 
H. oflicinalis. Blue flowers in a terminal spike. 
H. officinalis alba. White flowers in a terminal spike. 
IBERIS. Perennial Candytuft. 
Profuse blooming little plants, well suited for 
rockeries, stumps, edgings, etc. 
I. corifolia. A dwarf form; compact 
heads of pure white flowers in early spring. 30 
cents. 
I. Gibraltarica. Flowers large, white* 
tinted with red; fine. 30 cents. 
L Jucunda. The smallest of its family, 
growing only about 21 inches high. The leaves 
are minute, and the flowers are in tiny clusters, of 
a pleasing flesh color, and veined with rose in 
early summer. 
1. sempervirehs. Evergreen Candy¬ 
tuft. Of spreading habit; flowers pure white, 
completely covering the plant with bloom ; one 
of the finest border plants. Valuable for forcing. 
April or May. 30 cents. 
I. tenoriana. A neat species, of dwarf growth, that produces in summer a 
profusion of white flowers, changing to purple. 
IBERIS SEMPER VIRENS. 
