The  Wm.  H  Moon  Company  T.«-y-x^T».T»r->       -r-w-r^-r-.-r-^-..-rTi.-r-.-   .   -.-  ^ 
Glenwood  Nurseries  »  MOON'S  PERENNIALS 
MornsviUe,  Pennsylvania 
Pure   white    flaked  with 
finest  red  varieties. 
with  center 
Rose;  center  sulphur-yellow. 
Rich,  rosy-purple. 
Rosy-blush,  yellow  center, 
PJEONIES— Continued 
Festiva  maxima. 
purple. 
Gigantea.     One  of  the 
Flowers  large  and  perfect. 
Golden  Harvest,  Creamy-white, 
shading  to  yellow. 
Jeanne  de  Arc. 
Modes te  Guerin. 
Marie  Lemoine. 
carmine  spotted;  late. 
Rosea  superba.    Light  rose.    Very  large. 
Souvenir  de  L'Exposition  Universalle.  Light 
cherry. 
Triumph  de  L'Exposition  de  Lille.  Soft  rose, 
with  white  reflection. 
Paeonia  Officinalis 
This  type  flowers  a  little  earlier  than  the  above 
varieties. 
Officinalis  alba.  Blush  white. 
Officinalis  rosea.  Bright  rose. 
Officinalis  rubra.    Rich  crimson. 
P/^)ONIA  Moutan.  Japanese  Tree  Peonies. 
These  are  dwarf  shrubs  that  flower  earlier  than 
the  herbaceous  varieties.  The  flowers  are  large  and 
beautiful.  We  offer  assorted  colors.  75  cents  each; 
$7.00  per  10. 
The  Cornflower  Aster  (Stokesia  cyanea),  whose  rich  blue  flowers 
continue  uninterruptedly  from  July  to  October.  See  description  on 
opposite  page. 
Phlox 
Phlox  set  the  garden  aglow  with  pure  colors  from 
ivory-white  to  the  most  dazzling  flames  of  scarlet 
and  cardinal.  They  grow  in  any  soil,  are  very 
hardy,  and  where  bloom  and  color  are  needed,  they 
are  without  a  rival. 
PRICES  of  all  Phlox,  15  cents  each;  $1.25 
per  10;  $10.00  per  100. 
Beranger.  Shell  pink,  with  darker  eye.  Large 
heads. 
Champs  Elysses.    Rich  purplish-crimson. 
Coquilicot.    Scarlet.    One  of  the  best. 
Coran  d'Ache.    Cerise-pink,  free  flowering. 
F.  G.  Van  Lassburg.    Pure  white. 
General  Von  Heutsz.  New  brilliant  salmon- 
red,  with  white  center. 
Mrs.  Jenkins.    Best  early  white. 
Selma.    Pink,  with  cherry-red  eye. 
PHLOX  sublata.  Moss,  or  Mountain  Pink. 
A  low-growing,  half-creeping  evergreen,  that  is 
buried  in  very  early  Spring  beneath  a  multitude  of 
little  flowers.  It  is  a  splendid  thing  for  a  ground 
cover  in  barren  places,  for  rockeries,  graves  and 
bedding.  Price,  10  cents  each;  75  cents  per  10; 
$6.00  per  100. 
var.  alba.  White, 
var.  rosea.    Bright  rose  color. 
PHYSOSTEGIA  Virginica.    A  splendid 
Summer-flowering  perennial,  with  long  spikes 
of  showy,  soft,  pink  flowers,  valued  for  bou- 
quets.   3  feet. 
var.  alba.    Pure  white. 
PLATYCODON  grandiflora.  Balloon 
Flower,  or  Chinese  Bellflower.  Re- 
sembles the  Campanula  in  appearance,  and 
blooms  continuously  from  June  until  October. 
Grows  about  2  feet  high.  The  flowers  are 
deep  blue  and  are  1  to  IK  inches  across. 
See  illustration,  page  75. 
var.  alba.  A  white  flowered  form  of  the 
above. 
PLUMBAGO  larpente.  Lead  Wort. 
A  low  spreading  plant,  with  a  profusion  of 
indigo-blue  flowers,  toward  the  latter  part  of 
Summer.    8  inches. 
POLYANTHUS.    See  Primulas  below. 
POLYGONUM  compactum.  A  very 
good  plant  in  any  position;  has  a  smothering 
mass  of  soft  cream-white  bloom,  with  reddish- 
green  foliage  suggestive  of  its  name,  "Knot 
weed".    August  and  September.    18  inches. 
PRIMULA  elatior.  Oxlip.  Low-grow- 
ing plants,  bright  with  yellow  blossoms  in 
early  Spring. 
P.  veris.  English  Cowslip.  A  favorite, 
low  growing  plant,  whose  early  Spring  flowers 
include  a  wide  range  of  colors.  Splendid  for 
edgings. 
76 
Prices  f .  o.  b.  here,  no  extras  for  packing 
