

Tetiys 
HARDY PERE NNIALS (continued) 
Price: 30¢ each, $3.00 per dozen, $20.00 per 100, except where noted 
HEUCHERA (Coralbell) 
Few hardy Perennials lend themselves to as many uses in the 
garden as Heuchera. It makes a beautiful border with its 
rosettes of heart-shaped leaves, that remain green most of 
the Winter. 
From late June to September they send up slender spikes 18 
inches high, covered with small bright coral bells. It is ideal 
in the rock garden and fills an important blooming period 
in the herbaceous border. As a cut-flower, it keeps well and 
is most attractive used with other flowers for a table dec- 
oration. 
*Pale Pink—Very pale pink shade of this very popular Peren- 
nial. Flowers the entire season, and even when not in 
flower the foliage is most attractive. 
*Sanguinea—Pale pink to vivid crimson. 
HOLLYHOCK (Double) 
No old-fashioned garden is complete without Hollyhocks. 
Their stately spikes produce bold effects that cannot be ob- 
tained with any other flower. 
Newport Pink—A very beautiful shade of clear glistening pink. 
Deep Rose—Old Rose shade. 
Yellow—Lemon shade of yellow. 
White—A true pure white Hollyhock. 
IBERIS (Hardy Candytuft) 
Among the many species of plants particularly suitable for 
dwarf beds, borders and the rockery, none surpass the hardy 
Candytufts in making a rich showing during their flower- 
ing season. The foliage is also quite ornamental, being 
evergreen most of the Winter. 
*Sempervirens—Pure white flowers which completely cover 
the plants in May. About 15 inches high, and splendid for 
edging borders and rock gardens. 

SUPREME COLLECTION OF JAPANESE 
TRIS — STANDARD VARIETIES 
The showiest of the early summer flowers in the garden. 
Magnificent flowers in beautiful shades of color and very useful 
as cut flowers. This is the one type of Iris on which lime 
should never be used. 
Azure—Double. Mauve-blue with wavy petals. The dark halo 
surrounding the yellow blotch at the base of the petals is 
most enchanting. 
Columbia—A very striking double blue with pure white veins 
and yellow center. 
Conspicuous—Very strong growing, profuse bloomer of reddish 
violet. 
Gold Bound—Double. Large, double white enriched by a 
creamy glow, from the gold banded center. 
La Favorite—Large white with delicate veinings of blue and 
a great purple center. 
Mahogany—The nearest color we have to red in Japanese Iris. 
Grand double flowers of a rich mahogany color blooming 
late in the season. 
Mount Hood—Double. Light blue with darker shadings and 
bright orange center. 
Purple and Gold—Double. A striking violet purple with a 
conspicuous gold throat and bluish white rays. 
Pink Pearl—Double. A delicate pearly pink with lilac tones. 
Quite an unusual coloring for Japanese Iris. 
Pyramid—Double violet purple, veined white in center of each 
petal. 
Rose-Anna—Double, mauve lavender, darker halo. Petals of 
soft, crepe-like texture, with yellow blotch at base. 
Red Riding Hood—Amaranth pink suffused white. A grand 
color combination. 
T. S. Ware—Double. Large reddish violet flowers with con- 
trasting white center. 
Violet Beauty—Large, single flower of a rich, dark violet pur- 
ple, with long, conspicuous yellow center and graceful, 
crepe-like texture. A tall growing variety, very showy in 
garden. 
SIBERIAN IRIS 
*Sibirica, Variety Orientalis—These are grassy-leaved Irises 
retaining lovely flowering foliage throughout the season and 
blooming just at the close of the bearded Iris season. The 
delicately poised blossoms are attractive and valuable both 
for cutting and garden decoration. White. Price: 25¢ per 
plant, $2.50 per dozen. Shades of Blue. Price: 25¢ per 
plant, $2.50 per dozen. 

Rose Anna Iris 
LAVANDULA (Sweet Lavender) 
*Lavandula Vera—Sometimes called Spica or Officinalis, a 
shrub attaining a height of about 3 feet, producing lavender 
flowers later in the season, mostly grown for its fragrance 
or drying for Winter use. It is extensively used for rock 
gardens or as a border. 
LIATRIS (Blazing Star) 
Squarosa—Long spikes of brilliant lavender blue flowers sur- 
rounding the stem like small thistles. Flowering in July and 
August when this particular color is lacking in the garden. 
Attains a height of about three feet and an excellent cut- 
flower subject. 
Squarosa Alba—Pure white form of the above. A most at- 
tractive spike of flower in the garden, and one that caused 
a great deal of comment this past season. 
Forty-one 
