Toth osere 
HARDY PERENNIALS (Continued) 
Price: 30¢ per plant, $5.00 per doz.. $35.00 per 100. except where noted 
Varieties starred (*) are suitable for Rock Gardens. Varieties daggered (+) are suitable for Cut Flowers. 
TRIS KAEMPFER (Continued) 
Iris Kaempferi 
+Columbia—A very striking double blue with pure white veins 
and yellow center. 
+Dominator—Single. A dark violet blue, lighter veinings of 
orange at base of falls; makes a splendid spot of color in the 
July garden. Upright standards, very large, horizontal falls. 
+Doris Childs—Pearly white petals veined with rosy bloom. A 
very fine double flowering sort. 
+Gold Bound—Double. Large, 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. 
+La Tosca—Immense double white flowers with pale shadings. 
A very beautiful strong growing variety. One of the choicest 
in our collection. 
+Mahogany—The nearest color we have to red in Japanese 
Iris. Grand double flowers of a rich mahogany color bloom- 
ing late in the season. 
+Mount Hood—Double. Light blue with darker shadings and 
bright orange center. 
+Mrs. J. A. Hayden—A lovely double white suffused pale violet 
and the anthers occasionally develop into extra petals which 
make this almost treble in form. 
+Purple and Gold—Double. A striking violet purple with a 
conspicuous gold throat and bluish white rays. 
+Pyramid—Double violet purple, veined white in center of each 
petal. 
+Queen of the Blues—Pale, delft blue veined white. A very 
handsome flower of six petals. 
+Red Riding Hood—Amaranth pink suffused white. A grand 
color combination. 
+T. S. Ware—A double reddish violet veined white with a 
center marked lemon. 
+Waka Musha—Deep pansy-like flowers veined violet over a 
white ground with a pure white border. 
+Wister’s Favorite—Semi-double flowers of a beautiful shade 
of light blue. A nice carrying flower in the garden. 
Thirty-Eight 
SIBERIAN IRIS 
+*Siberica V. Orientalis—These are grassy-leaved Irises retain- 
ing lovely 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. Shades of Blue. Height, 18 to 24 
inches. Price: 30c per plant, $3.00 per dozen. 
LAVANDULA (Sweet Lavender) 
“Lavandula Vera—Sometimes called Spica or Officinalis, a 
shrub attaining a height of about 3 feet, producing lavender 
flowers late 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 (Gayfeather) 
+Scariosa September Glory—Clean purple flowers produced in 
late August and September on long spikes. One of the 
hardiest Perennials in cultivation and excellent for cut 
flowers. 3 to 6 feet. 
+Scariosa Alba—Glistening white spikes of the above which 
create a striking effect in the garden in late August and 
September, 3 to 5 feet. 
LINUM (Flax) 
*Perenne—One of the most effective of the blue perennial 
flowers, growing about 18 inches high and flowers from May 
through July. When planted en masse, makes a very beau- 
tiful show of color. 
LOBELIA (The Cardinal Flower) 
+Cardinalis—Perennial, by offshoot, grows 1% to 3% feet high, 
blooms from July to September. A wild flower of rare 
beauty that responds well to cultivation. Grows best in damp 
or wet ground, along brooks, in semi-shade, and prefers an 
acid soil. Shows to advantage with a background of ever- 
greens or shrubbery or in a floral garden where glorious 
“cardinal red” will add new life during its August blooming 
period. 
LUPINUS (Lupin) 
7Standard Sorts—Effective plants with large spikes of flowers 
blooming profusely in May and June. They grow best in 
well-prepared garden soil, preferably in a sunny or semi- 
shady location. 3 feet. Blue, White, Pink. 
Lupin 
