PAPAVER ORIENTALIS 
LYCHNIS, attractive plants for the border and rock¬ 
ery blooming during summer and early fall. Alpina, 
brilliant rose. Arckwrightii, many lovely colors. Chal- 
cedonica, rich scarlet. Flos Cuculi, rosy purple. Haage- 
ana, mixed colors. Lagascae, rose with white eye, ever¬ 
green. Viscaria Splendens, brilliant rose. 
LYTHRUM Roseum Superbum, 3 ft., spikes of bright 
red flowers. 
MALVA Moschata, Musk Mallow, 2 ft., showy large 
clusters of fragrant flowers. Rose, White, Mixed. 
MECONOPSIS Baileyii, glorious sky-blue Poppy-like 
flowers with showy golden anthers. 
MONARDA Didyma, 2 ft., aromatic foliage; rich scar¬ 
let flowers in July and August. 
MYOSOTIS, Forget-me-not. Beautiful little plants for 
a moist shady place. Flowers are produced very freely 
and are almost continuously in bloom. Quite pleasing 
whether massed in beds, borders or ponds. Alpestris 
Blue Eyes, blue white eye. Alpestris Rosea, pirrk. Dis¬ 
tinction Praecox, blue. Marga Sacher, deep sky blue. 
Palustris Semperflorens, blue. Sutton’s Royal Blue, rich 
indigo blue. Victoria Snow Queen, white. Victoria Rose 
Delight, rose pink. Separate or Mixed. 
NEPETA Mussini Superba, 1 ft., compact plants pro¬ 
ducing masses of blooms of a rich deep blue during 
spring and summer; fine rock plant. 
PRIMULA VERIS (Elatior) 
OENOTHERA, Evening Primrose, splendid plants 
for sunny borders or the rockery, making a con¬ 
tinuous display throughout summer. Fraseri, 
yellow. Missouriensis, golden. Speciosa Grandi- 
flora, white with yellow eye. 
ONONIS Spinosa, 18 in., pinnate foliage, purple 
pea-shaped flowers. 
ONOPORDON Salteri, 11 ft., thistle; silvery 
foliage, large blue flowers. 
ORNITHOGALUM Thyrsoides Alba, Star of 
Bethlehem, 1 ft., clusters of star-shaped white 
flowers. 
PAPAVER Orientalis. The improved hybrids of 
Oriental Poppies are the largest and most attract¬ 
ive of garden perennials. The long fringy leaves 
are not unlike a Fern, and the showy buds that 
issue from the ground on strong stems from 2 
to 3 feet high develop into enormous cup-shaped 
flowers, brilliant in color and graceful in form. 
Once started will last for years. Apricot Queen, 
apricot. Beauty of Livermere, crimson with black 
blotch. Benary’s German Hybrids, splendid mix¬ 
ture. Brilliant, fiery-red. Excelsior Hybrids, 
mixed. Mrs. Perry, orange-apricot. Pink Beauty, 
flesh pink. Princess Victoria Louise, salmon- 
pink. Queen Alexandra, rosy-salmon with crim¬ 
son spots. Salmon Queen, salmon-yellow. Sep¬ 
arate or mixed. 
PAPAVER Nudicaule. The Nudicuale or Ice¬ 
land Poppies should be ii> every garden. They 
are of neat habit, growing about 18 in. high and 
bear on strong stems, large showy fragrant flow¬ 
ers from early May until October. El Monte, deep 
tangerine-orange. My Lady Duchess, orange-red. 
Coonaria Pinks, art shades mixed. Fakenham 
Hybrids, wonderful range of colors. Gartref 
Strain, delicate art shades. Imperial Jewels, 
frilled, richest shades, mixed. New Sunbeam, 
splendid mixture. 
PARDANTHUS Sinensis, Blackberry Lily, 3 ft., 
star-shaped, reddish orange, tigered and spotted. 
PENTSTEMON, 2 ft., spikes of large-flowering 
tubular blooms in a wide range of colors. 
PHLOX Perennial New Hybrids, 2 ft., amor^g 
our finest perennials, succeeding in any soil and 
position. Large showy flowers of the most beau¬ 
tiful shades. 
PINKS, Hardy Garden, clove-scented, single and 
double, richest colors. 
POLEMONIUM, Jacob’s Ladder, 1 ft., clusters 
of lovely bloom. Coeruleum, blue, while, mixed. 
Prima Donna, azure. Richardsoni, light blue 
with yellow anthers. 
SCABIOSA JAPONICA 
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