The  Wm.  H.  Moon  Company  Ar/-\/-\^->o  -r»T--r»T-x-x-T\TO 
Glenwood  Nurseries  M  MOO^  SPERE^^IALS 
MorrisviUe,  Pennsylvania 
Hollyhocks 
Everyone  knows  these  grand  old  garden  plants. 
We  have  them  in  various  colors,  they  make  beauti- 
ful perennial  hedges  and  backgrounds  for  other 
plants.  In  colonies  about  house  foundations  and 
in  garden  corners,  they  scarcely  have  an  equal. 
Double  Pink  Double  Salmon  Rose 
Double  Red  Single  assorted 
Double  White  Single  Red 
Hollyhock,  var  Walla  Walla.  Rosettes  of  car- 
mine, pink.    Vigorous  grower. 
HYPERICUM  Moserianum.  Gold  Flower. 
A  most  beautiful  plant,  with  bright  green  leaves 
and  waxy,  golden-\'ellow  flowers,  that  are  doubly 
attractive  because  of  their  numerous  vellow  stamens. 
1  foot.  Price,  25  cents  each;  S2.00  'per  10;  S15.00 
per  100. 
IBERIS  sempervirens.  Hardy  Candytuft. 
A  dwarf  plant  with  evergreen  foliage,  valued  for 
rockeries  and  edgings.  Pure  white  flowers  in  April 
and  May. 
Iris.  Fleur-de-Lis 
Popular  herbaceous  plants  that  come  up  year 
after  year,  and  each  '  season  stronger  and  more 
floriferous  than  the  previous.  They  grow  in  clumps 
and  do  well  in  almost  any  soil.  Their  colorings 
have  a  wide  range,  and  many  are  delicate  in  pencil- 
ings  of  softest  shades.  They  can  be  appreciated  in 
beds,  in  borders,  along  water  edges  and  in  both 
formal  and  wild  gardens. 
German  Iris  (Iris  Germanica) 
The  German  Iris  begins  flowering  about  the 
middle  of  May  and  continues  in  bloom  nearly  four 
weeks;  when  they  are  succeeded  at  the  middle  of 
June  by  the  Japan  Iris.  Prices  of  German  Iris, 
excepting  where  otherwise  noted. 
Each  10  100 
Strong  plants   $0  15      $1  25    $10  00 
Extra  heavy  clumps   25       2  00  1500 
ADONIS.  A  deep  blue.  Fine  and  earliest  to 
flower. 
Charlotte  Patty.  Standards  golden  -  yellow; 
falls  lightly  veined  with  blue. 
Florentina  alba.  White,  slightly  fragrant  and 
early. 
Garrick.  Upper  petals,  delicate 
light  blue;  lower,  a  darker  violet  blue. 
Madame  de  Bonne.  Pure  yel- 
low, distinct  and  handsome. 
Madame  de  Brabant.  Stand- 
ards lavender;  falls  purple,  streaked. 
Madame  Chereau.  White,  with 
a  delicate  fringe  of  blue.  Distinct; 
tallest  grower. 
Pallida.  Carmine-purple;  de- 
lightfully fragrant,  beautiful  and 
good. 
Pauline.  Light  blue;  lower 
petals  slightly  darker.  A  splendid 
late  sort. 
Reine  de  Pays.  Standards  saf- 
fron-yellow, falls  carmine-maroon, 
lightlv  veined. 
William  III.  Standards  pink, 
falls  a  little  darker;  a  giand  sort. 
Price,  25  cents  each;  $2.00  per  10.  Siberian 
Japan  Iris  (Iris  Kaempferi) 
Prices  of  all  the  varieties,  25  cents  each; 
$2.00  per  10;  $15.00  per  100. 
Datedogu.  Rich,  claret-red;  orange  blotches, 
blue  halo. 
Gekka-no-nami.    Pure  white;  yellow  blotches. 
Kagaribi.  Brilliant  ruby,  feathered  white;  yel- 
low blotches. 
Kakujakuro.  Blue  and  purple,  heavy  feathered 
white;  yellow  blotches. 
Kumona-no-sora.    White,  sky-blue  zone. 
Yedo-kagami.  Crimson;  orange  blotches,  with 
blue  halo. 
Siberian  Iris  (Iris  Siberica) 
Smaller  flowers  than  the  preceding  types;  in  May 
and  June.  Splendidly  adapted  for  mass  and  water- 
side plantings.    See  illustration  below. 
Price,  15c.  each;  $1.25  per  10;  $10.00  per 
100. 
Iris  Siberica.  Blue. 
var.  alba.    White,  veined  with  lilac. 
LATHYRUS  latifolius.  Everlasting,  or  Per- 
ennial Pea.  Climbs  8  to  10  feet  in  height 
and  produces  clusters  of  large,  rosy-red,  pea-shaped 
flowers  the  entire  Summer.    Useful  for  cutting. 
var.  Pink  Beauty.    Shell  pink  flower. 
LAVENDULA  vera.  Lavender.  This  sweet- 
scented  plant  is  pretty  in  midsummer  with  blue 
flowers  IK  ft.  high,  but  it  is  also  planted  for  the 
aromatic  leaves  retaining  their  fragrance  long  after 
they  are  cut. 
LIATRIS  elegans.  Blazing  Star,  or  Gay 
Feather.  Dazzling  rosy-purple  spikes,  4  to  5  feet 
high,  lasting  a  long  time  in  July  and  August. 
LINUM  perenne.  Flax.  Early  in  May  this 
plant  begins  to  bloom  profusely  and  flowers  for 
several  weeks.  The  flowers  are  delicate  and  of  a 
magnificent  azure-blue  color.  A  splendid  plant  for 
colony  plantings,  especially  in  natural  landscapes. 
2  feet. 
Iris,  showing  how  well  it  is  adapted  to  water-side  planting. 
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