


ANTHERICUM (Saint Bruno’s Lily) 
3 for $1.50 
ACHILLEA Filipendulina, Parker’s Va- 
riety. Yarrow. Tall plant with big 
clear yellow flower-heads; prefers a dry 
location. Very fine for cutting, and may 
also be dried for winter bouquets. 214 
to 3 ft. June, Sept. 3 for $1.35; 10 for 
$4.00. 
Millefolium roseum. Milfoil. 
heads of deep pink flowers. 
foliage. 114 to 2 ft. June, Sept. 
$1.25; 10 for $3.00. 
Tomentosa. Woolly Yarrow. Bright yel- 
Compact 
Finely cut 
3 for 
low flowers. Excellent for rockeries. 
1 ft. June. 3 for $1.00; 10 for $3.00. 
fo 
AQUILEGIA a \ 
Crimson Star 


3 for $1.35 
AJUGA. An excellent family of rock-garden 
or ground-cover plants, thriving in semi- 
shade under trees and flowering n May 
and June. 
Genevensis. Dark blue flowers. Com- 
pact. Good foliage. 6 in. 
Reptans. Blue blooms. Vigorous; soon 
carpets ground. 1 ft. 
Reptans atropurpurea. Blue flowers. 
Bronze foliage. Compact growth. 6 in. 
May, June. 
3 for $1.00; 10 for $2.50 
ANCHUSA myosotidiflora. Forget-me- 
not-flowered Anchusa. Likes partial 
shade and is a fine ground-cover. 1 to 
11% ft. April, May. 3 for $1.35; 10 for 
$4.00. 
ANTHERICUM (Paradisea) Liliastrum 
Major. Saint Bruno’s Lily. (Named 
for the founder of the Carthusian monks.) 
The white flowers, like Madonna lilies, 
are carried on an erect spike surrounded 
by narrow, grass-like foliage. Charming 
in both the border and rockery; also 
good for cutting. Give plenty of water 
when about to bloom. A hardy peren- 
nial herb; very short rhizome and 
rather thick fasciculate root-fibers 14% 
ft. May, June. 60 cts. each; 3 for $1.50. 
AQUILEGIA. Columbine. One of the most- 
loved perennials. Best planted in groups 
of three. 
B. & A. Long-spurred Hybrids. 
sorted colors, all shades. 
2 to 3 ft. May, June. 
Chrysantha. Lovely golden yellow. 2 
to 3 ft. May, June. 
Crimson Star. Large flowers with crim- 
son sepals and spurs and white petals, in 
May and June. Grows 2 feet high. A 
really spectacular flower. 
3 for $1.35; 10 for $3.50 
ASCLEPIAS tuberosa. Butterfly-Plant. 
One of our showiest native plants. Bears 
large heads of brilliant orange-scarlet 
As- 
A fine strain. 
flowers. 2 to 3 ft. July, Aug. 3 for 
$1.00; 10 for $2.40. 
ASTILBE (Spirza) Arendsi Hybrids. 
These hardy hybrid Astilbes will thrive 
in any good rich soil if given plenty of 
water during the growing season. 
Flowers in showy panicles, freely pro- 
duced. 2 ft. June, July. 
Avalanche. Pure snow-white flowers on 
long spikes. Excellent for forcing. 
Gloria Superba. A big improvement on 
Oe en shade of brilliant dark 
pin 
3 for $1.25; 10 for $3.50 
BEARBERRY (Arctostaphylos Uva-ursi). 
A most Interesting story about bears 
and their fondness for the grape-like 
berries of this plant is responsible for its 
common name. Handicapped by its 
botanical name, this useful low-growing, 
gray-green-foliaged ground-cover has 
not been as popular as it deserves. For 
covering rocky slopes and sandy banks 
very few plants can equal it for effective- 
ness. Large established plants in 314- 
in. poe 3 for $1.50; 10 for $4.50; 100 for 
$40.0 
BLEEDING-HEART (Dicentra spectabi- 
lis). This fine old favorite, flowering in 
May and June, is indispensable. Growth 
commences early in the spring and dies 
back in summer. 3 for $1.75; 10 for $5.00. 
| CERASTIUM tomentosum. Snow-in- 
Summer. Bright silvery foliage, with 
white flowers. Suitable for dry, sunny 
places. 6 in. May, June. 3 for $1.00; 
10 for $2.50. 
DA Y-LILY 
(Hemerocallis) 
Lily-like plants with grass-like leaves and 
yellow and orange flowers. They are all easy 
growers, thriving in almost any situation, and 
growing admirably in partial shade. By se- 
lection of varieties the flowering season can 
be prolonged from late May to early August. 
Fine for cut-flowers in the daytime, closing 
after dark. 
All Early-and Late-flowering Varieties, 
50 cts. each; 3 for $1.35; 10 for $4.00, in 
any combination of varieties, except 
where noted. 
Early-flowering Varieties 
Aureole. Golden yellow flowers. 
early-blooming variety. 3 ft. 
June. 
Citrina. Large, very fragrant, sulphur- 
yellow flowers. 3 ft. June, July. 
Dumortieri. Orange-yellow flowers. Good 
foliage. 2 ft. May, June. 
Florham. Golden yellow, trumpet-shaped 
flowers marked darker yellow. June, 
July. 
Sovereign. A very early-blooming variety 
with flowers of deep orange. 2 to 3 ft. 
June, July. 
Thunbergi. Lemon Lily. Much like 
Flava, but blooms in July, a month 
later. Spikes 2 to 3 feet tall, bearing 
pale yellow blossoms. 
A very 
May, 
Late-flowering Varieties 
Clifton Gold. New. Golden yellow, lily- 
like flowers, opening wide on 3-foot 
stems, in mid-July. 75 cts. each; 3 for 
$2.00. 
Clifton Lemon. New. Lemon-yellow 
flowers opening very wide, produced in 
great abundance m mid- July on 4-foot 
stems. 75 cts. each; 3 for $2.00. 
Flava. Sweet-scented; clear full yellow. 
2% ft. 
Margaret Perry. Brilliant orange- 
scarlet with a distinct yellow line run- 
ning through each petal; bold yellow 
base. 4 ft. Blooms nearly two months. 
Ophir. A tall-growing lemon-yellow va- 
riety producing its flowers in late July 
and early August. 

BLEEDING-HEART. 3 for $1.75 
Bobbink & Atkins 
