STUMPP & WALTER CO. . 132-138 Church St. (at Warren) . NEW YORK CITY 
PRICES, unless otherwise noted, 90 cts. for 3; $3.25 per doz. Purchaser pays transportation beyond 50 miles of New York 
it Dwarf plants for the Rock-garden and edging the Perennial Border 
ASTER FRIKARTI 
$1.50 for 3; $5.50 per doz. 
SANTOLINA incana . if Lavender Cotton. 
Low, spreading, silvery gray leaves ana 
fragrant, yellow flowers. 
Small plants, 90 cts. for 3; $3.25 per doz. 
SCABIOSA. Pincushion Flower. Broad, cir¬ 
cular flowers on long stems for cutting. 
Caucasica, Giant Hybrids. (Isaac 
House Strain.) Delicate lilac and mauve 
predominate but pure white and several 
dark blues also occur. 2 ft. July. 
$1.20 for 3; $4.50 per doz. 
SEDUM. Stonecrop. These plants should be 
found in every rock-garden, and many 
are suitable for carpet bedding. Thrive 
almost anywhere. 
Acre, if Green foliage. Bright yellow 
flowers. 3 in. June. 
Altissimum. if Yellow. 6 to 8 in. July, 
Aug. 
Balticum. * 3 in. June. 
Beyrichianum. ★ Compact green rosettes 
with pink centers. A good carpeter. 
Dasyphyllum. ★ Rose. 3 in. June. 
Lydium. ★ Pink. 2 in. June. 
Middendorffianum. * Excellent matting 
variety, 4 inches high, with yellow flow¬ 
ers. Reddish purple foliage in autumn. 
Nevi. it Blue-gray rosettes. 4 in. July. 
Sieboldi. if Rose-pink. 9 in. Aug. 
Spectabile, Brilliant. ★ Improved form 
of Spectabile. Rosy red. ft. Aug. 
SEMPERVIVUM. Houseleek. Evergreen 
succulents resembling Sedums. The 
leaves are often brightly colored at tips. 
Arachnoideum. ★ Cobweb Houseleek. 
Bright red. 6 in. Sept. 
Globiferum. Pale yellow. 1 ft. Aug. 
Choice Mixed Seedlings. 9 in. Aug. 
SIDALCEA Candida. A charming border 
plant producing handsome spikes of 
satiny white flowers. 3 ft. July-Sept. 
Stark’s Hybrids. Choice strain in white, 
rose, and pink. 
Rose Queen. Pale pink. 4 to 5 ft. July— 
Sept. 
SILENE. Catchfly; Campion. 
Alpestris. A Alpine Catchfly. Numerous 
dainty white flowers. 6 in. May—July. 
Schafta. A Moss Campion ; Autumn Catch¬ 
fly. Very neat plant with rose-pink flow¬ 
ers. 6 in. July—Sept. 
ARMERIA, FARMINGDALE GIANTS 
$1.20 for 3; $4.50 per doz. 
SPIR^A Filipendula ( Astilbe ulmaria). 
Goat’s Beard. Suitable for borders, damp 
situations, and marginal ornamental 
water plantings. June and July. 
Filipendula alba. Creamy white flow¬ 
ers. 2 ft. 
Davidii (Astilbe Davidi). Variety of 
vigorous habit with pale pink blooms. 
3 ft. 
Palmata elegans. Light pink. 3 ft. 
Ulmaria fl.-pi. (Filipendula). The well- 
known double Meadowsweet. Creamy 
white flowers produced in abundance 
during June and July. 3 ft. 
STACHYS lanata. ★ Soft silvery foliage. 
Spikes of purple blooms. The beauty of 
the plant is in the foliage. 1 ft. July. 
STATICE latifolia. Big-leaf Sea Lavender. 
Very decorative. 2 ft. Aug. 
Latifolia dumosa. Bluish lavender flow¬ 
ers which, when dried, are pure silver. 
R- Aug. $1.20 for 3; $4.50 per doz. 
STOKESIA lilacina grandiflora. Silvery 
blue with a lilac suffusion at center. The 
flowers are often 5 inches across and can 
be cut with stems 18 to 20 inches long. 
$1.20 for 3; $4.50 per doz. 
TEUCRIUM Chamaedrys. ★ A picturesque 
subshrub with glossy green foliage and 
bright rose flowers. 1 ft. Aug. 
THALICTRUM. Meadow-Rue,. 
Adiantifolium. Foliage like the maiden¬ 
hair fern. White flowers in June. 1 ft. 
Glaucum. Heads of feathery yellow 
flowers. 4p£ ft. July. 
Minus, if Known as the Maidenhair 
Thalictrum. A charming dwarf plant for 
the rock-garden. White. 9 in. 
THERMOPSIS caroliniana. Five-foot 
plants with yellow pea blossoms in July. 
Mollis. Yello w flowers all summer. 3 ft. 
THYMUS, if Thyme. These charming, fra¬ 
grant plants give a lovely carpet effect, 
being of dwarf, spreading habit. They 
prefer a dry situation. 
Azoricus. ★ Green mats with rosy flowers. 
4 in. June. 
Lanuginosus. if Woolly Mountain Thyme. 
6 in. June. 
Serpyllum album. * Pure white. 4 in. 
June. 
Serpyllum coccineus. Crimson. 4 in. 
June. 
CHRYSANTHEMUM, WHITE SWAN 
Double Shasta Daisy 
$1.20 for 3; $4.50 per doz. 
TROLLIUS. Globe Flower. Like immense 
buttercups. These striking, hardy peren¬ 
nial plants are very effective in the 
mixed border. 
Eleanor. Free-flowering. Pale yellow. 
2 y 2 ft. 60 cts. each; $6.50 per doz. 
Ledebouri. Siberian. Yellow flowers. 
2)^ ft. June. 60 cts. each; $6.50 per doz. 
TRITOM A. Red-Hot Poker; Flame Flower; 
Torch Lily. 
Pfitzeri. For bedding. Surpasses cannas 
for brilliance and gladiolus as a cut- 
flower. $1.00 for 3; $3.75 per doz. 
S. & W. Co.’s Hybrids. Full range of 
colors from white to burnt orange. 
90 cts. for 3; $3.25 per doz. 
VERONICA. Speedwell. Showy and free- 
flowering perennials, mostly blue, native 
to Europe and North America. 
Blue Jay. Late flowering. 3)^ ft. Aug. 
Filiform is. ★ Trailing evergreen. Blue 
flowers with white lips almost cover the 
foliage in early spring. 
Incana nana. ★ Blue flowers. Silver foli¬ 
age. 6 in. July. 
Incana rosea. ★ Soft pink flowers with 
silvery foliage. 15 in. July. 
Repens. ★ Good carpeter. Covered in 
May and June with light blue flowers. 
Spicata. Spikes of blue blooms. Can be 
used to follow delphinium. 2 ft. June. 
True Blue, if Blue spikes. 1 ft. July. 
VINCA. Madagascar Periwinkle; Old Maid. 
3—4 in. May. 
Alpina. Trailing evergreen. Purple. 
$1.00 for 3; $3.75 per doz.; $27.50 per 100 
VIOLA odorata. Sweet Violet. These hardy, 
cultivated Violets grow 6 inches and are 
covered with flowers in May. 
Frey’s Fragrant Single. * A real Violet. 
Ideal for picking. 
Marie Louise. Large, double, lavender- 
blue flowers. $1.20 for 3; $4.50 per doz. 
Rosina. ★ Dark rose-pink flowers; fra¬ 
grant. $1.20 for 3; $4.50 per doz. 
Russian Single. ★ Produces great masses 
of fine, large, deep purple flowers of 
much fragrance. 
Snow Queen. Pure white flowers on long 
stems and very freely produced. Best 
white Violet we have introduced. 
$1.20 for 3; $4.50 per doz. 
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