PLANT THIS FALL FOR NEXT YEAR’S BEAUTY 
DORONICUM 
VIRGINIA BLUEBELL 
Mertensia virginica 
Flowers blue, funnel-formed, in 
nodding clusters. Splendid in cool, 
moist, shady places. Should not be 
disturbed when once planted and is 
best planted in the fall. 
85 cts. for 3, $2.30 for 10, 
$20 per 100 
LYCORIS SQUAMIGERA 
Amaryllis Halli 
A beautiful member of the lily 
family whose green foliage of the 
early spring disappears in June, and 
is then followed in late summer by 
thick, bare stems, each bearing 6 to 
7 lily-like, pink flowers. 2 ft. Late 
July, Aug. 
This beautiful lily is perfectly 
hardy and can be successfully 
planted only in the fall. 
75 cts. each, $6 for 10 
VIRGINIA BLUEBELL 
DORONICUM 
Leopartl’s-Bane 
Doronicums are best planted in 
the fall for flowering the following 
spring. Their golden yellow, daisy¬ 
like flowers are useful for border 
display as well as for cutting. 
Doronicum caucasicum. Yel¬ 
low marguerite flowers, 2^ to 
3 inches across, on 18-inch 
stems. 
D. excelsum magn ificum. Bright 
yellow blooms on 1^ to 2-foot 
stems. 
D. Clusi. Numerous yellow daisy¬ 
like flowers April to June, on 
stems 12 to 15 inches high. Fine 
for the front of the perennial border. A 
dwarf variety very suitable for the rock- 
garden. 
50 cts. each, $1.40 for 3, $3.50 for 10 
BLEEDING-HEART (Dicentra spectabilis) 
This fine old favorite, flowering in May and June, 
is indispensable. Growth commences so early in the 
spring that best results are obtained by fall planting. 
50 cts. each, $1.40 for 3, $4 for 10 
LILY-OF-THE-VALLEY 
Our clumps are the true large- 
flowering type and are perhaps 
the best ground-cover for situa¬ 
tions of dense shade. They are 
best planted in late fall. 
$1.50 for 3, $4 for 10, $35 per 100 
GYPSOPHILA 
Baby’s-Breath 
Bristol Fairy. Double-flowering 
Baby’s-Breath. Very useful with 
cut-flower arrangements. Grows 
2 to 3 feet high. Exceptionally 
hardy and long-lived. Blooms 
June to September. 
50 cts. each, $1.35 for 3, $4 for 10 
CHRYSANTHEMUM maximum 
HEUCHERA 
Alum-Root; Coral-Bells 
One of the most desirable perennials of 
neat, compact growth. Numerous slender 
panicles of brightly colored bells spring 
from a tuft of heart-shaped leaves, giving a 
delicate, airy effect in the garden and for 
cutting. Height 1 to 2 feet. 
Heuchera, Cascade. A very strong grower 
with light pink flowers borne on stems 
over 2 feet high. June, July. 
H., Edge Hall. Large, flesh-pink bells and 
prominent yellow stamens. 1 ft. June, July. 
H., Freedom. Long sprays of light rose bells. 
H., Jubilee. Large flowers of glistening 
rose-pink. 
H. sanguinea, Pluie de Feu. Excellent 
bright fiery red flowers on loose, elegant, 
graceful spikes. ft. June, July. 
H., Saturnale. The darkest of all Heuch- 
eras. Flowers wine-red. 1 to 13^ ft. June, 
July. 
H., Snowflake. Pure white. Considered 
the best white Heuchera. 
45 cts. each, $1.25 for 3 of any one variety, 
$3.50 for any 10 
King Edward. New. Large-flowered Shasta 
Daisy. Pure, glistening white blooms from 
July through October. Grows 3 feet high, 
exceptionally free flowering. 
35 cts. each, $1 for 3, $2.75 for 10 
LIATRIS 
Gayfeather 
The sturdy, long stems or spikes of Liatris 
may be twisted and turned for many artistic 
arrangements. The plants are among the 
hardiest and most easily grown of all true 
perennials. 
Liatris scariosa alba. New. The snowy 
white spikes create a most striking effect 
in. the border for several weeks during 
midsummer. 
L., September Glory. Lovely purple flow¬ 
ers produced during late August and 
September. Fine companion for L. 
scariosa alba. 
L. punctata longifolia. New. Purple 
flowers in August. Much like September 
Glory, but more dwarf and with longer 
foliage. 
45 cts. each, $1.25 for 3 of any one variety, 
$3.50 for any 10 
HEUCHERAS 
Sanguinea, Pluie de Feu. Snowflake. Freedom. 
20 
Bobbink & Atkins 
