Hardy Perennial Plants 
15 cts. to 25 cts. per Clump 
Note: Place your order early so as to be SURE not to 
be disappointed. Orders placed too late very often 
cannot be filled. We deliver at the proper time to plant. 
VARIETIES MARKED * ARE SUITABLE 
FOR ROCK-GARDENS 
Caillardia 
Sweet William 
ACONITUM (Monkshood). Blue. Fine for shade. 
HOLLYHOCKS A necessary part of every old- 
fashioned garden. 
* ALYSSUM 
Saxatile Compactum. Masses of gol¬ 
den yellow flowers in May. 
AQUILEGIAS or COLUMBINES 
their graceful spurred flowers on stems 2 feet 
or more above the foliage. 
-Y ARABIS A 'i >i,,a (Rock Cress). Forms a dense 
carpet of pure white flowers in early 
Spring. 
+ IRFRK Sempervirens. Hardy Candytuft. Pure 
white flowers in June. 
* IRIS Dwarf Hybrids in Variety. 
IRIS JAPANESE Come into flower middle of 
June and continue for 3 to 4 
weeks. They succeed in almost any soil and 
position. 
¥ ARMERIA 
(Sea Pink). Dense heads of pink 
flowers on stiff, wiry stems. 
* ASTER Alpinus. Large, showy, bluish purple 
flowers in May and June. 
ASTERS Hardy in variety. 
CAMPANULAS OR CANTERBURY BELLS 
They like a good, rich soil. Plant in a half 
shady place. 
LYCHNIS Chaleedouiea (Jerusalem Cross). Heads 
of brilliant orange-scarlet in June and 
July; grows 2 to 3 feet high. 
MYOSOTIS (Forget-Me-Not) Useful in a shady 
spot in the border. 
JtL NFPFTA Mussini. Violet blue flowers during 
Tlurtm July and August. 
pi-JLQX Succeed in almost any soil and position; 
and flower through a long season. 
Y- CAMPANULA carpatiea. Carpathian Harebell. 
Clear blue flowers on wiry stems 
from July until October. 
CARNATIONS- 
-¥■ CERASTIUM 
foliage. 
-HARDY BORDER Choice mixed 
seedlings. 
Tomentosnm. (Snow-in-Summer). 
Pure white flowers and silvery 
CHRYSANTHEMUMS Hardy Garden in variety. 
Korean Hybrids. 
COREOPSIS Lanceolata grandiflora. Rich golden- 
yellow. Valuable for cutting; bloom 
all summer. 
DELPHINIUMS (Hardy Larkspur) Among the 
most popular subjects in the 
hardy border; of easiest culture. 
PHLOX Subulata (Moss, Pink). Early spring¬ 
flowering, with moss-like evergreen 
foliage. Excellent for the rockery or for cover¬ 
ing graves. 
M. PLUMBAGO harpentae. Leadwort. Deep blue 
flowers, summer and fall. 
PYRETHRUM Easy to grow in any good garden 
soil. Their season of bloom is 
June and July; 18 to 24 inches. 
★ SAXIFRAGA Cordifolia Roekfoil. Rose-pink 
flowers, almost as soon as the 
frost is out of the ground. 
SCABIOSA Caueasica. (Perennial Seabiosa). Blue 
Bonnet. 
Y-SEDUM Stonecrop —in variety. 
4 DIANTHUS Deltoides. Maiden Pink. Pink 
flowers all summer. 
DIGITALIS (Foxglove) These produce spires of 
blossoms 3 to 5 feet high. Stately old 
garden favorites. 
ENGLISH DAISY (Beilis Perennis). Improved 
CINULian UADI double-flowering, white and 
pink. 
SHASTA DAISIES OR WHITE MARGUERITES 
Blooms 3 to 4 inches across, of glistening 
white. Bloom all summer and fall. 2 feet. 
SWEET WILLIAM A well-known hardy peren¬ 
nial. 
-¥■ THYMUS Thyme in variety 
FIIPATORIIIM Coelestinum. (Perennial Agera- 
lutm i uivium tum) Blue 
GAILLARDIA (Blanket Flower). Succeeds in any 
^ soil in a sunny position. Flowers 
the entire season. The center of the flower is 
red-brown, petals marked with rings of crim¬ 
son and orange. 
TRITOMA (Red-hot Poker, or Torch Lily) Hardy 
v v if given protection. In bloom from 
August to October, with spikes 3 to 4 feet high, 
and heads of bloom of a rich orange-scarlet. 
w VERONICA Ineanna. Speedwell. Bright silvery 
-r y foliage with spikes of amethyst- 
blue flowers during Juy and August. 
GEUM In variety. 
GYPSOPHILA Hepens. White and Pink flowers, 
^ July and August. 
VFRON IGA Longifolia Subsessilis (Japanese 
y v Speedwell.) Forms a bushy plant 2 
to 3 feet high, with long dense spikes of deep 
blue flowers from July to September. 
GYP^OPHIIA Panieulata. (Perennial Baby’s 
OinurniLM Breath). White. 
HEMEROCALLIS In Variety. 
In addition to the above we can supply many 
other Hardy Perennials and Rock Plants. 
We solicit your inquiries. 
TO KEEP YOUR CUT FLOWERS FRESH AND LOVELY USE "FLORALIFE"—See Page 30. 
