HARTMANNIA SPECIOSA—*erbx(2-3)24. Satiny, three- 
inch blossoms open translucent white, but deepen to dainty 
pink. Sometimes called Wind Primrose. Prefers light soil. 
Quick, reasonably persistent, beautiful. Pkt. 15c. # 
HAWORTHIA MARGARITIFERA—htw. Thick succulent 
leaves are studded with pearly dewdrops. Pkt. 20c. 
HEBENSTREITIA COMOSA—*ecbfx(3-4)30. Dusk perfume. 
Little white flowers, orange marked, in long spikes. Even¬ 
ing fragrant. Pkt. 15c. # 
♦HEDEOMA PULEGEOIDES—eok(9). American Penny¬ 
royal. Sweet herb. Oil said to keep mosquitos away. Pkt. 10c. 
HEDERA HELIX—vy 30 ft. English Ivy. Hardy to Mas¬ 
sachusetts. High climbing. Also used as evergreen ground 
cover. Rather slow germinating. Pkt. 10c. 
HEDYCHIUM GARDNERIANUM — euftbx(htw) (4 or7)40. 
Garland Lily. Soft yellow flowers, spicily perfumed. Ganna 
culture, or force. Pkt. 15c. 
HEDYCHIUMS MIXED—euftbx(htw) (4-7). Tall spikes of 
showy flowers, lemon, gold, rose or crimson. Always fra¬ 
grant. Good pot plant, or garden. Pkt. 10c ; % oz. 25c. 
HELENIUM AUTUMNALE CHIPPENFIELD ORANGE— 
cbh(4)50. Jagged-edged daisies of rich orange, with ma¬ 
hogany shadings. Full sun, Pkt. 10c, 
HELENIUM BIGELOVI—cbh(3-4)40. Long-rayed yellow 
flowers. Good border plant. Pkt. 15c. 
HELENIUM HOOPESI—cbdh(3)40. Hardy perennial with 
showy clustered flowers of rich yellow. Pkt. 15c. 
HELIANTHEMUM CANADENSE—ernh(3)15. Frost-flower, 
Bright orange. Branching. Upright. Pkt. 15c. # 
HELIANTHEMUM NUMMULARIUM—ergltx(2-3)9. Rock 
Rose. Silver-leafed mounds, long spread with dazzling color, 
silky blossoms in all the possible variants and blendings of 
white, lemon, chrome, copper and rose. Full sun, and, 
above New York, winter shelter from north winds, Pkt. 
10 c; % oz. 20c. # 
HELIANTHEMUM TUBERARIA—€rdfh(2-3)4. Sun Rose. 
Wide mats of silvered foliage, with blossoms like yellow 
satin. Full sun. Drought resistant. Pkt. 25c. 
HELIANTHUS 
Safe and showy perennials for the hardy border, or for 
backgrounds. Some of them cut well. 
HELIANTHUS ANGUSTIFOLIUS — ecbmtx(3)40. Wiry 
branching stems, gracefully diffuse. Well-formed blossoms 
of golden orange, brown-centered. Good. Pkt. 10c. # 
HELIANTHUS GIGANTEUS—*ecbtx(4)84. Flowers of bright 
lemon. Excellent background. Pkt. 10c, # 
HELIANTHUS ORGYALIS—*ecbltx(5)90. Column-flower. 
First half of the season the plants are grouped foot-wide 
pillars of rippling, undulating greenery. Then quickly they 
double in height, each stem topped with a branching four- 
foot panicle of pretty little yellow blossoms. A most desir¬ 
able plant for the hardy border, no trace of coarseness, but 
always strikingly decorative. See illustration, page 4. Pkt. 
15c; % oz. 35c. # 
HELIANTHUS MOLLIS—ebdh(3)40. Big flowers of soft 
lemon on leafy stems. The plant is mantled in a downy, 
ashy felting. Likes dry places, where it will spread to 
form big clumps. Pkt. 10c. # 
HELIANTHUS PETIOLARIS—ebx(3)50. Good branching 
hardy species. Bright yellow. Pkt. 10c. # 
HELIANTHUS TUBEROSUS—eunbh(4)72. Jerusalem Arti¬ 
choke. A most worthy, showy Sunflower, not coarse. Tubers 
are edible, cooked like potatoes, or raw with oil and vine¬ 
gar as a salad. Pkt. 10c, # 
OFFER 83A8—One pkt. each of above for 65c. 
Those are happiest who keep closest to natural things. 
Prime, and ultimate, is the soil; material of life- 
manifest. 
HELICHRYSUM BELLIDIOIDES—rgfh(3)7. An attractive 
and unusual trailing perennial from South Island of New Zea¬ 
land, silver-leafed and wide-spreading, the whole studded 
over with snowy everlasting-flowers. Pkt. 16c. 
HELICHRYSUM SELAGO—rstfh(2) 15. Shrub-let of tangled 
gray-green whipcords, set with white daisies. Dry, shady 
cliffs of New Zealand. Pkt. 15c. 
HELICHRYSUM SEMIPAPPOSUM—rfh(3)16. A Tasma¬ 
nian this time, that likely will need protection to winter. 
Half-shrub, with gray leaves and flowers of deep orange. 
It should be noted that all the perennial Helichrysums are 
somewhat slow germinators. Pkt, 16c. 
HELONIAS BULLA.TA—rbmth(l)16. The rare Stud-Pink. 
From low rosettes rise stout stems that terminate in spikes 
of pretty starry flowers, opal-pink, with blue anthers. Con¬ 
sidered a bog or pool-edge plant, and so it is if grown in 
full sun, but it is likewise shade-tolerant, and in light 
shade it will grow in garden soil of ordinary dryness. Makes 
an effective and unusual potplant. Seed seldom sets under 
cultivation, but our plants this year have given us a fine 
set of plump seeds. Slow germinating, but worthy all 
patience. Pkt. 25c. # 
HELLEBORUS or CHRISTMAS ROSE 
HELLEBORUS NIGER — cbzylS, True Christmas Rose. 
Lovely white or rose-flushed flowers. Very hardy. A few 
mild days sometimes bring established plants into bloom 
in late winter. Pkt. 10c; % oz. 60c. 
HELLEBORUS ORIENTALIS HYBRIDS—cbzyl8. Lenten 
Rose. Blooms in March. Rose, claret and purple. Pkt. 16c, 
HELLEBORUS CORSICUS—cbzyl8. Rare hardy species 
from Corsica, with pale yellow flowers; the foliage deco¬ 
rative, glossy emerald with serrate edges. Pkt. 20c. 
OFFER 84A8—One pkt. each of above for 40c. 
HEMEROCALLIS HYBRIDS 
Here are the new Day Lilies that have of late been so 
much in horticultural news. Marvelous tones of lemon, buff, 
gold, orange and copper, with tawny shadings and ruddy 
overlays. Many are fragrant, all are hardy. About half the 
seed ^ :n this blend is saved directly from large-flowering 
hybrid^ named varieties. The balance is product of hand- 
pollenized blooms of such species as Dumortieri, Minor, 
Aurantiaca, Middendorflfl, Fulva, Citrina, Flava and Serotina, 
pollen in each instance, and daily, being transferred with soft 
brush, from one species to another. There should be rather 
wonderful variation among the plants produced from this 
seed. ^ Hemerocallis seed grows quite readily if sown while 
soil is cool, late fall or early spring. Any sowings made 
in summer, should be in carefully shaded seed-bed. The Day 
Lilies cut well, and are always ornamental in the border. 
They seem to have no diseases, and given any chance at 
all, they will thriftily take care of themselves. Pkt. 15c; 
% oz. 60c oz. $1.00. # 
HEPATIC A ACUTILOBA—rnltsty(l)8. Lovely flower of 
early spring. Blossom-cups in green ruffs. Lustrous lilac, 
blue and purple will appear, with blush white and buff- 
tinged pink. Hepaticas may be forced effectively and readily. 
Pkt. 20c. # 
HEPATICA TRILOBA—Different leaf shape, and acid tol¬ 
erant. Otherwise like acutiloba. Pkt. 20c. # 
HERACLEUM MANTEGAZZIANUM—bty(9) 10 ft. For 
unusual effects and backgrounds. Makes gigantic clumps, 
with three-foot lobed leaves, and umbels of white flowers, 
sometimes four feet across. Slow germinating. Pkt. 15c. 
HERBERTIA DRUMMONDIANA—euftk(2)15. Pretty blue' 
flowered bulb, on general style of Tigridia, and requiring 
like handling. Rare. Pkt. 20c. 
HERNIARIA GLABRA — rgph(9)2. Spreading, emerald, 
moss-like mats, red-bronze in winter. Pkt. 15c. 
HESPERALOE PARVIFLORA—ehtw40. Handsome semi- 
succulent that seems to blend Yucca, Aloe and Agave. Tall 
inflorescence of pretty rosy-red bells. Hardy in south, but 
for pot or tub culture north. Pkt. 15c. 
HESPERANTHERA BUnRI—eufx(utw) (1-7)8. Pink buds 
open to fragrant white at dusk. Pkt. 20c. 
HESPERIS ALPINA—ebx(2)36. It throws itself so heart¬ 
ily into the mass production of beauty that it is apt to 
exhaust its strength in a single season. It is easy, though 
to keep a succession of plants, for no species germinates 
more readily. Great bloom-panicles in what I think of, 
for no good reason, as the “paint” range, lavender, lilac, 
mauve, violet and purple, palest flushings to deep vividness. 
Pkt. 16c. # 
HESPERIS NIVEA—erx(2)10. Dense terminal clusters of 
pure white flowers. Altogether distinct, and meritorious 
species. Pkt. 15c. # 
HESPERIS STEVEVIANA—eotbx(2)30. First season there 
are decorative low-spreading rosettes of foliage. Early next 
spring, stems rise in tangled bush form, each ending in an 
enormous panicle of glowing violet bloom, a pure, rich, 
deep^ shade. Remains attractive for many weeks. Rare 
species from the Crimea. Pkt. 16c. # 
HESPERIS TRISTIS — erbx(2-3)25. Clustered blossoms, 
tisually nut-brown, but varying from sepia-veined cream to 
full purple. Dusk-fragrant. Will naturalize. Pkt. 10c. # 
t 32 ] 
