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PERENNIALS NOT PRICED 
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ANTHERICUM. 
liliastrum. (St. Brunos Lily.) 30 cents. 
AQUILEGIA. 
caerulea. (Rocky Mountain Blue Columbine.) 
canadensis (Canadian Columbine.) Fine for 
naturalizing. 
chrysantha. (Yellow Long Spurred Colum¬ 
bine.) 
chrysantha. Blackmore & Langdon’s choice 
hybrids. 
chrysantha. Mrs. Scott Elliott’s hybrids, 
flabellata nana alba. Pretty dwarf variety well 
adapted for rock gardens. 30 cents each. 
ARABIS. (Rock Cress.) 
albida. Single white Rock Cress, flowers very 
early. 
albida flore-pleno. Double white, much supe¬ 
rior to the single form. 35 cents each, $4.00 
doz. 
mollis. Compact grower, pure white spikes 
carried well above the foliage, 
muralis rosea. (Pink rock cress.) 
snow cap. A very compact form of alpina, fine 
novelty. 35 cents. 
AREN ARIA (Sandwort.) 
caespitosa. (Mossy Sandwort.) Close mossy 
like growth, small greenish white flowers, 
montana. (Mountain Sandwort.) Lovely large 
pure white flowers. 
repens. (Creeping Sandwort.) Fine rock plant, 
very prostrate. 
ARMERIA. 
alpina. Very dwarf and compact rock garden 
variety. 30 cents. 
Bee’s ruby. A deeply colored variety, dwarf 
and fine for rock garden. 30 cents, 
caespitosa. Bright close pink heads of flowers 
abundantly produced. 50 cents, 
laucheana. Rich rosy red, height 6 inches, 
maritima. Pale pink, very compact, splendid 
for edgings. 
maritima alba. Pure white, very compact 
habit. 
ARTEMTSIA. 
lactiflora. (Chinese Mugwort.) Creamy white 
fragrant flowers in late summer, excellent 
for cutting. 
Silver King. Very attractive silvery foliage, a 
valuable variety. 
ASPHODELUS. 
luteus. (Yellow asphodel or Jacobs rod), a fine 
perennial. 
ASCLEPIAS. 
tuberosa. (Butterfly weed.) Brilliant orange 
flowers, very showy. 
ASTERS 
. The hardy asters are rapidly forging ahead in 
importance and no garden of hardy plants today is 
at all complete without them, while a few varieties 
bloom in May and June the great bulk of the family 
are late summer or fall bloomers. In the past few 
years there have been some splendid varieties pro¬ 
duced abroad, the bulk in England but some on the 
European continent, very few have been raised in 
Amenca although European hybridizers had to de- 
pend on our native varieties to produce the many 
hybuds sent to us for many years. The new dwarf 
