Hardy 
Garden 
Flowers 
Prices on all Perennial Plants 
(unless quoted otherwise) 
25c each; 3 for 50c; 10 for $1.50, 
postpaid. 
Chrysanthemums 
. i o tall 
White Dotty 
Normandy Yellow b U s f hy. ta com- 
pact growth, with very double blossoms 
(see picture above). One of the very best 
hardy, early flowering Chrysanthemums 
of good yellow color. 
2 ft. tall, in 
habit of growth 
the same as the above variety. The color 
of the flower is a pretty pink, fading to a 
pale pink, and are very double. 
Normandy Pink 
2 % ft. tall; a nice 
bushy plant with 
double pure white flowers. 30c each, 
for 70c; postpaid. 
The new everbloommg 
Aiaaain Chrysanthemum with beau¬ 
tiful double blossoms of a most showy 
bronze-gold color. Begins to bloom m 
August and continues all through late 
summer and fall. 30c each; 3 for 70c: 
postpaid. , . 
tv 1 /'-< „ Makes a lovely, 
Pink Cushion dense, cushion 
shaped bush, entirely covered with dainty 
double flowers of pink color from Septem¬ 
ber until heavy frost. Very good. 
Chrysanthemum Iva early and 
most freelv flowering plant of Dwarf type 
with pretty bronze flowers. _ 
Chrysanthemum 
Collection 
2 Pink Cushion 
1 Aladdin 
1 Tva 
1 Diana 
1 Apollo 
1 Ceres 
1 Mercury 
1 Mars 
1 Daphne 
All 10 for only 
2.25 Postpaid. 
2 ft. tall. Flowers in Sep- 
uapnne tember in large sprays, 
daphne pink with blac shading, 3V 2 inches 
in diameter and golden yellow stamens. 
A sparkling combination of 
A.pOlAO bronze, red and gold, suf¬ 
fused with glowing salmon. Very large 
sprays of flowers. , . , 
A rare color combination of 
Hiana rose-pink mingled with lilac*- 
rose to soft salmon. Very good. 
si Verv prettv combination of old 
oeres go i d> chamois yellow and soft 
coppery bronze, appearing as if dusted 
with gold. 
Nicely formed 3-inch single 
mercury flowers opening bronze-red, 
changing to coppery red. A most charm¬ 
ing flower. 
Deep amaranthe-red, changing 
mars to wine-red with velvety sheen. 
Excellent. 
The G above varieties, 40c each; 3 for 
$1.00; 6 for $1.85; postpaid. 
FALL ASTERS 
Mauve Cushion 
iy 2 ft. across and about 9 inches 
-- high, forming a dense cushion 
shape. Blooms well in a delicate shade of soft mauve with 
silvery reflex_ * . One of the prettiest dwarf 
Alpinus (jrOliatn Aster plants, fine for border 
work and in the rock garden. 6-12 inches tall and very 
bushy, blooming in the summer. Bluish-purple blossoms. 
stands full sun welh ^ old fashioned garden flower, 
lartanca Aster 3 to 4 ft. tall with immense num¬ 
bers of lovely bluish colored blossoms in the fall, 
uers OL mve . _ 3 ft . tall, of the New England 
St. bgwyn Aster Aster type. Almost red, and very 
freelv flowering. 
BUTTERFLY FLOWER 
. , ■ m 2 ft - tall. Blooms in June and 
Asclepia iuperosa July, producing compact um¬ 
bels of brilliant orange colored flowers. Sometimes found 
on Nebraska dry land. A hardy plant. 
Canterbury Bell t 2 a?!! 
An old fashioned and always 
highly attractive garden flower. 
They come in all shades of blue, 
pink and white, mixed. 
Rotundifolia tpo^oTthi 
old fashioned Canterbury Bell. 
Not quite as ta'l, but with blos¬ 
soms equally pretty. 
THE ANCHUSAS 
Dropmore, Anchusa Italica 
Grows 4 ft. tall, 
„____ making a nice 
background plant that blooms almost all through the summer- 
in panicles of skv-blue flowers. For repeated blooming 
cut the faded flowers. A beautiful dwarf plant, 
Anchusa Myositldlllora both for grand fo’iage 
effect with its pretty round leaves, and for the attractive 
flowers which resemble those of the Forget-Me-Not. For 
rock gardens and border planting very fine. Grows 12 to lb 
inches tall. 
FOXGLOVE 
Digitalis Vo "« r ? 
that is always sure to bloom the 
first year. Very pretty in the 
flower bed as well as in bou¬ 
quets. Should be in every flow¬ 
er planting. 
PLANTING INSTRUCTIONS 
, furnish perennial plants separately that is .separate from trees or 
"p'lanV^hem "abSut'tL STs’ the^werV gtwntThe'nurse'ry an/water well right after planting. There is no other care required 
at planting time. I shall describe the proper soil conditions on page 40.___. 
1886—Sonderegger Nurseries and Seed House 
Beatrice, Nebraska—1937 
[341 
