42 Hardy Perennial Plants 
The STORRS & HARRISON CO 
Hemerocallis Flava 
HEMEROCALLIS 
Flava. (Lemon Lily). 3 feet. June; de¬ 
lightfully fragrant. 
Florham. 3% feet. June and July; golden, 
tinged a dusky Indian yellow. 
Xwanso fl. pi. (Double Orange Lily). 
Deep copper with reddish spots. 
Thunberg'i. 4 ft. July; buttercup-yellow. 
All above: 3. 65c; doz., $2.25. 
CHOICE N'O'VIIIiTIES 
Anna Betscher. 2 feet. July, August; 
golden yellow. 
Bay State. 3 feet. July; deep yellow. 
Br. Regel. 18 inches. May; rich chrome- 
yellow. 
Goldeni. 30 inches. July; orange to gold 
center. 
Gypsy. 3 feet. July; orange and red. 
H. B. Wyman. 4 ft. July; deep orange. 
J. A. Crawford. 4 feet. Late June. Rich 
apricot, shaded light cadmium-fellow. 
Long season. 
lemona. 4% feet. About July 1st. Delicate 
lemon-yellow; very large and shaped 
like a Japanese Iris. 
Modesty, Varying height and flower size; 
very free, on slender stems; clear, pale 
1 yellow. Late July. 
> Mrs. W. H. Wyman. 3 feet. August; 
j light lemon-yellow. 
The G-em. 3 feet. June, July; deep yellow- 
i apricot. 
Each, 75c; 3, $2.00; doz., $7.50. 
> HOLLYHOCKS 
This stately old plant is truly “King of 
the Garden.” Hollyhocks inject so much of 
color and life and picturesqueness into tall 
backgrounds with their gorgeous, densely- 
set pillars ranging in height from 4 to 7 
feet, ablaze throughout the summer. 
Double Flowered Large rosettes of 
■ --—- paper-like tissue, 
very compactly layered. Separate colors: 
Scarlet, Cream, White, Purple or 
Pink. 
Single Flowered “ A1 * e « 11 en J ” 
- or Mammoth. 
Fringed. Tall ; very large fringed flow¬ 
ers. Mixed. 
Anemone Flowered TheNew English 
.. — — “Imp era-tor.” 
Magnificent Anemone flowers in many 
pastel combinations. 
All: 3, 55c; doz., $2.00. 
IBERIS<§> (Hardy Candytuft). Dwarf with 
handsome dark evergreen foliage, when 
in bloom a covering sheet of substantial 
flowers. 12 inches. 
Hardy Candytuft 
Liatris Scariosa 
Kenilworth Ivy 
Blue Flax 
S. & H. Double Hollyhocks 
IBERIS— 
—gibraltarica. Delicate lilac flowers. May 
and June. 3, 55c; doz., $2.00. 
—sempervifens. Pure white flowers, frag¬ 
rant, in early spring; the plant com¬ 
pactly spreading. 3, 70c; doz., $2.50. 
IN17XA<*> Royleana. 2 feet. Flowers large, 
daisy-like, petals separated ; orange-yel¬ 
low, with conspicuous black buds. 
3, 70c; doz., $2.50. 
IRIS. (See page 43.) 
IATKYBUS latifolius (Hardy Perennial 
Pea). A rampant climbing, clinging per¬ 
ennial, with numerous dense clusters of 
scentless Pea flowers. Pink or White. 
3, 70c; doz., $2.50. 
LAVANBFLA vera (Sweet Lavender). 
18 inches. July and August. Sweetly frag¬ 
rant spikes of little blue flowers. 
3, 55c; doz., $2.00. 
—Mmistead Strain. 1 foot. May-June. 
Clear lavender. 3, 70c ; doz., $2.50. 
EEWISIA<§> Howelli. Fleshy, ovate ever¬ 
green leaves in a rosette. Cymes of half¬ 
inch, deep rose flowers. 
Each, 35c ; 3, $1.00; doz., $3.50. 
IiIATRIS. Showy, slender with erect flow¬ 
er stems foliaged like Lilies. 
— pycnostachya (Blazing Star). 4 to 5 
feet. Feathery spikes of rosy purple, 
about 18 inches long. July-Aug. (Color 
page B). 
— scariosa. 3 to 4 feet. Deepest purple in 
color, with long but interrupted racemes. 
August-September. 
Both: 3, 70c; doz., $2.50. 
IILY-OP-THE-VALLEY and LILIES. 
See page 58. 
XiI2TARIA<$> Creeping herbaceous peren¬ 
nials, small-leaved with tiny flowers; 
dense, refined ground cover for semi¬ 
shade in moist soil. 
—Aquitriloba. Flowers pale mauve with 
reddish purple throat. 
— Cymbalaria (Kenilworth Ivy). Flowers 
y 2 inch long, lilac-blue. 
—Pilosa. Flowers lavender with yellowish 
throat; leaves pubescent. 
3, 70c; doz., $2.50. 
LINUM perenne (Blue Flax). The plant 
bushes up evenly about 24 to 30 inches 
with feathery, glaucous foliage; the sur¬ 
face spangled with perfectly round, flat, 
solitary, azure-blue flowers from May to 
August. A fresh crop with each morn¬ 
ing’s dew. 3, 55c; doz., $2.00. 
