WELL PLANTED HOMES 
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Prices of All Perennials 
Except as noted. 
Each, 20c 6 for $1.00 
IOO for $15.00 
For Post and Insurance, add 10%. 
Peony, Reine Hortense 
Yucca—Adam s Needle 
Hillenmeyer's Sturdy P e re n n i a I s 
Fresh Dug, Are Certain to Give You-3-(v 
Marvelous Results. Jl 
Sweet William 
PEONIES 
The Flowers For Everybody 
There are few flowers which have been im¬ 
proved more than the Peony. From the old- 
fashioned reds and pinks, familiar in our grand¬ 
mothers' gardens, we now have marvelous va¬ 
rieties with better color, form, and all-around 
quality. 
They are at home and should be in every 
garden. Plant the crowns about 2 or 3 inches 
deep, use bone meal, see that they get suf- 
ficent water at blooming time, and you will 
be more than pleased if you use HILLEN¬ 
MEYER'S CHOICE ROOTS. 
— LOOK AT THESE PRICES — 
STRONG DIVISIONS—YOUR ASSORTMENT 
35c each; 3 for $1.00. 
For Parcel Post and Insurance, add 10 per cent. 
PINK PEONIES 
Asa Gray. Midseason. Soft shell-pink, mottled 
and veined rose. Vigorous. 
Edulis Superba. Early. Deep rose. Valued for 
its fragrance and freedom of bloom. 
Lady Alexandra Duff. An unusual delicate 
flesh-pink. One of the most striking of all 
Peonies, with extra-large, cup-shaped flow¬ 
ers. 
Livingstone. Late. Clecr pink. Very fine. 
Marguerite Gerard. Midseason. Delicate pink. 
Large and vigorous. 
Mons. Jules Elie. Early to midseason. Large, 
compact; lilac-rose with lighter pink base 
petals; fragrant. Extra fine. 
Reine Hortense. Midseason. Large, flat; flesh 
to shell-pink; very fragrant. One of the 
finest. 
Samuel Hughes. Late. Fine upright variety 
with unusual style and color combination— 
silver-pink. Excellent new variety. 
Sarah Bernhardt. Late. Very large flowers of 
apple-blossom-pink, with silver-tipped petals. 
Vigorous. 
Solange. Late. Large, compact. Outer petals 
delicate, waxy white, deepening toward 
the center with shades of golden brown. 
A strong, free bloomer. 
Venus. Midseason. Pale hydrangea-pink; large; 
compact. 
RED PEONIES 
Felix Crousse. Midseason. The most pleasing 
velvety red, fading to lighter shades as the 
blossom fades. 
Francois Ortegat. Midseason to late. Very 
dark rose-red with yellow stamens; large, on 
strong stems. Extra good. 
Karl Rosenfield. Late midseason. Large, 
showy, rich velvety crimson. Color striking. 
WHITE PEONIES 
Baroness Schroeder. Midseason. Delicate flesh- 
pink; fading to white with suggestion of 
heliotrope and gold. 
Couronne d'Or. Late. Cream-colored, compact 
and very desirable. 
Festiva Maxima. Early. The grandest white 
Peony. The extra large flowers are pure 
white, except petals tipped carmine. 
Marie Jacauin. "Water-Lily Peony." Semi¬ 
double; favorite with everyone. 
Mme. de Verneville. Early. Desirable, free- 
blooming variety that should be in every 
collection. 
SINGLE PEONIES 
Unusual bargains, 35c each; 3 for $1.00. 
Clairette. Large white flowers of unusual 
beauty; prominent tuft of golden stamens. 
Duchess of Portland. Delicate shade of flesh- 
pink; large. 
L'Etincelante. Rose-pink, margined silver. One 
of the best. 
Perle Rose. Light pink, petals edged silver-rose. 
Rosy Dawn. Large, snow-white, with very deli¬ 
cate blush shading in the bud. 
The Moor. Very attractive deep rich red of 
unusual beauty; stamens yellow and striking. 
JAPANESE PEONIES 
35c each; 3 for $1.00. 
Akalu. Guards deep American Beauty shade; 
petaloids conspicuous saffron-yellow, mar¬ 
gined rose. 
Ruigegno. Dark maroon, with petaloids of most 
pleasing yellow. Very showy. 
Snow Wheel. Large, pure white petals and 
petaloids. Our best white Japanese variety. 
SEDUM. Stonecrop. Low-growing plants with 
fleshy leaves and showy masses of flowers. 
Fine for rockery. August and September. 
SEMPERVIVUM. House Leek. Fleshy-leaved 
mat-forming rosettes which produce heavy 
stemmed clusters of flowers. Excellent for 
dry, sunny places and rockery. Mixed. 
SHASTA DAISY. 
Alaska. Excellent. Large, glistening white 
flowers. May and June. 
Early Shasta. Hardiest with smaller flowers 
than other varieties. 
Mrs. C. Lothian Bell. Large single white flow¬ 
ers, excellent for cutting. 
STATICE latifolia. Sea Lavender. Minute pur¬ 
plish blue flowers in late summer. 2 ft. 
SWEET WILLIAM. Old favorites, bearing 
their sweet clove-scented flowers in profu¬ 
sion during May and June. Mixed shades. 
Newport Pink. The best salmon-pink to date. 
TRITOMA. Red Hot Poker. Bright red cone¬ 
like heads from July until frost. 2-3 ft. 
VERONICA. Speedwell. One of the best hardy 
perennials with various colored spikes. Fine 
for rockery, border and cutting. 
V. incana. Deep blue silvery foliage. 12-15 
inches. July and August. 
V. longifolia subsessilis. Blue. One of the best. 
18-24 inches. July and August. 
V. spicata. Violet-blue. All summer. 2-2'/2 ft. 
VINCA minor. Periwinkle or Trailing Myrtle. 
A trailing evergreen plant used as a ground 
cover under trees or other shady situations. 
YUCCA filamentosa. Adam's Needle. Spikes 
of creamy white flowers borne on tall stems. 
Best for shrubbery border, large rockeries or 
planted in masses. June. 
V inca—Periwinkle 
Shasta Daisy 
