Dreer's 72nd annual edition garden book : 1910 . oz.;§8,00 per 100. CHAM^EEIRIUM. Luteum. A useful plant for nioi-t, .^hady positions, producing in Junedense, cylindrical heads of small creamy-yellow blosscms. 25 cts. each;^ per doz. CHA^I-iEPEVCE Fi.^h Bone and ornamental thisllc-like plants with spiny, neatly markedfoliage. Require protection in Foliage dark green, with cream-colored veins and yoUow- isli > Rright greenfoliage, ivory-while veins and cts. each; $ jier doz. CHEEONE .Shell Rower. Stalely and handsome pere
Dreer's 72nd annual edition garden book : 1910 . oz.;§8,00 per 100. CHAM^EEIRIUM. Luteum. A useful plant for nioi-t, .^hady positions, producing in Junedense, cylindrical heads of small creamy-yellow blosscms. 25 cts. each;^ per doz. CHA^I-iEPEVCE Fi.^h Bone and ornamental thisllc-like plants with spiny, neatly markedfoliage. Require protection in Foliage dark green, with cream-colored veins and yoUow- isli > Rright greenfoliage, ivory-while veins and cts. each; $ jier doz. CHEEONE .Shell Rower. Stalely and handsome perennials, growing about 2 feet higli and bearingnumerous spikes of large flower-heads during the summer and fall. (See cut.)Glabra Alba. Terminal spikes of creamy-while 1 leads of deep red Alba. Clusters of pure while flowers. 2-5 els. e:uh; $;0 per ; $ per 100. The making and care of « Hardy Border is fully deacribed on page* 172 and 173. HmRTADRHR-PHIlADiLPHIAPAm HARDY PEREhHIAL PbANTJ- JJIQ is^. Pompon Chrysanthemums. BurbanksShasta Daisy. Hardy Chrysaiitheinuiiis Burbanks Shasta DaisyAlaska. A decided im-provement on the original, veryfree-flowering, with blooms 5 inches across, of pureglistening white. 25 cts. each§ per doz. Burbanks Shasta Daisy. Large snowy-white flowers, in bloomcontinuously throughout the summerand fall. 15 cts. each ; g! per doz.; per 100 Nipponicum. A Japanese species; grows 2 feethigh, with thick foliage and bearing its large, glistening white flowers during September and cts. each; $ per doz. CIMICIFXJGA (Snake Root). Simplex. Most valuable by reason of its extreme late flowering, begin-ning in September and attaining full perfection about the middle ofOctober, a time when flowers are scarce. Its flowering stems arefrom 2^ to 3 feet high, terminated with a dense spike of white flowers,which, when cut, last in perfection a long time. (See cut.) 50 cts. each;§ pe
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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1910