«  MOON'S  PERENNIALS 
Iorr!sville,  Pennsylvania 
[ARDY  BUTTON  CHRYSANTHEMUMS-Continued 
Brown  Bessie.    Brown  button. 
Cerise  Queen.    Deep  cerise. 
Climax.    Deep  rose. 
Down.    Day-break  pink,  fresh. 
Elegantha.    Deep  pink,  white  edges. 
Fashion.  Maise-yellow. 
Fred  Peele.    Light  lilac;  leaves  scented. 
Hamlet.  Violet-red. 
Ladysmith.    Rosy  lilac,  tinged  salmon 
Pettilant.    Creamy  sulphur. 
Rosenante.    Blush  rose. 
S.  Melanie.    Splendid,  pure  white. 
Trojan.    Maroon,  very  profuse  and  fine. 
Anemone-Flowered,  or  Single 
Pompon  Chrysanthemum 
Aaron.-  Bronze-scarlet. 
Clara.  Pearl-white. 
Rosy  Morn.  Silvery-pink. 
Wallis.    Pure  yellow. 
Hardy,  Large  Flowering  Double 
Japanese  Chrysanthemums 
Large  Pink  Large  Yellow 
Large  White  Large  Crimson 
Chrysanthemum  Hybridum.  Shasta  Daisy. 
^ovely  daisy-like  flowers,  with  large  petals  of  white; 
)ure  as  Shasta's  snows.    Grows  18  inches  high. 
CLEMATIS  Davidiana.  A  shrubby  plant  that 
)lossoms  in  August  and  September.  Fragrant  bell- 
ihaped  flowers,  of  deep  lavender-blue.    2  to  3  feet. 
No.  I,  Digitalis,  or  Foxglove. 
No.  2,  Gaillardia,  or  Blanket  Flower. 
Clematis  Racta.  Clusters  of  showy  flowers  in 
June.  Pure  white  and  delicate.  2  to  3  feet.  Price, 
25  cents  each;  $2.00  per  10. 
CONVALLARIA  Majalis.  Lily-of-the-Val- 
LEY.  Many  people  still  demand  this  old-time 
flower,  and  treasure  even  poetic  thoughts  concern- 
ing it.  It  is  best  planted  in  some  nook  where  it  is 
partiallv  sheltered.  Price,  25  cents  each;  $2.00  per 
10;  SI 5. 00  per  100. 
COREOPSIS  lanceolata  grandiflora.  Noth- 
ing could  be  prettier  in  its  way  than  this  flower 
with  its  rich  golden-yellow  blossoms  (one  of  the 
strongest  colors  for  landscape  eflfects),  and  good  for 
cutting.  June  and  throughout  the  Summer.  3  feet. 
C.  rosea.  A  low  border  and  rockery  plant,  with 
small  pink  flowers.    August  to  September.    1  foot. 
Delphinium.  Larkspur 
Stately  flowers  that  inspire  and  create  great  love 
for  this  class  of  plants;  and  they  supply  a  color  and 
form  that  nothing  else  gives.  June  to  September. 
2  to  4  feet. 
DELPHINIUM  Belladonna.  Bright  azure. 
Price,  25  cents  each;  S2.00  per  10;  $15.00  per  100. 
D.  Chinense.  Cut-leaved  variety.  A  desirable 
sort.    Light  blue. 
var.  alba.    Same  as  above,  but  has  white  flowers. 
D.  formosum.     Strong,   robust  plants;  dark 
blue,  with  white  eye. 
DIANTHUS  barbatus.   Sweet  William.  The 
characteiistic  old-fashioned  garden  always  had  some 
of  these  attractive  plants.  In  May  and  June  they 
flower  in  clusters  of  red,  pink,  white  and  many 
pretty  variations.    IK  to  2  feet. 
Assorted  colors,  including  the  best 
Single  Pink  Single  Scarlet 
Single  White  Velvety  Maroon. 
D.  latifolius  atrococcineus  fl.  pi.  This  ever- 
blooming  Sweet  William  is  very  showy,  with  crim- 
son flowers  throughout  the  Summer. 
DIANTHUS  plumarius.  Hardy  Pinks.  Old- 
time  favorites  that  require  little  attention  and 
flower  bountifully  each  year.  They  are  valued  for 
edging,  also  in  rockeries  or  wherever  a  low  plant  is 
needed.  Clove-scented  flowers  in  May  and  June. 
Assorted  colors. 
DICENTRA  spectabilis;  syn.  Dielytra. 
Bleeding  Heart.  Long,  graceful  racemes  of  pink, 
heart-shaped  flowers  in  May  and  June.  IK  feet. 
Price,  20  cents  each;  $1.50  per  10;  $12.00  per  100. 
DICTAMNUS  fraxinella.  A  good  perennial 
that  improves  with  age  if  left  in  a  permanent  posi- 
tion. Flowers  of  a  soft  rose;  spiky  form.  2  to  3 
feet.  July. 
Digitalis.  Foxglove 
A  splendid  strain  of  familiar  old  fashioned  plants 
that  grow  3  to  4  feet  high  and  flower  in  June.  See 
illustration  opposite. 
Digitalis  Gloxinaeflora.  Spotted  with  soft 
colors  of  rose,  lilac  and  white. 
D.  grandiflora.    Flowers  lemon-yellow. 
D.  Maculata  superba.  A  choice  strain  of 
handsome  spotted  sorts. 
D.  Monstrosa.  Mammoth  Foxglove.  Huge 
flowers  of  assorted  colors. 
72 
We  have  had  thirty-nine  years  of  experience  in  growing  trees  and  shrubbery  of  quality 
