Hardy Perennial PHLOX 
Beacon. 
Africa. (New). A brilliant carmine'red with blood 
red eye. Well shaped flower heads composed of 
large florets. Good strong stem. One of the best 
new dark red varieties. 
Baron Von Heeckeren. Very large trusses of fine 
salmompink flowers. 
Beacon. Brilliant cherry^red. Grows 36 inches high. 
Flowers are carried on straight, strong stems. 
Excellent variety and one of the best of this 
color. 
B. Comte. Splendid dark purple'red or amaranth. 
Commander. Color is a brilliant deep crimsomred with 
slightly darker eye. Grows about 24 to 30 inches high 
and produces a great many spikes, creating a wonderful 
display of color. 
Eclaireur. Purple'carmine blooms with white center. 
Gen. Von der Heyden. Lovely salmon with a crimson eye. 
Marechal French. (New). Erect, massive flower heads of 
deep scarlet with blood red eye. 
Mrs. Jenkins. The earliest and best pure white variety. 
Mrs. Scholten. (New). Dark salmompink flowers in 
enormous pyramidal spikes. A splendid sort of great 
value. Mid'season flowering and of medium height. 
Rheinlander. Salmompink; both flower and truss are 
immense in size, and the color is intensified by a 
brilliant carmine eye. 
Richard Wallace. White with crimson eye. Splendid. 
Rijnstroom. Rose'pink; both flowers and truss are 
immense in size, and the color is intensified by 
a brilliant carmine eye. 
by parcel post 
for each six plants. 
T HE beauty and usefulness of these grand border 
plants give them deservedly first place among 
hardy plants. For cutting, their large trusses go a 
long way in floral decoration. In color they range from 
pure white to the richest crimson and purple, and from 
soft rose and salmon to bright corabred, all having a 
delicate fragrance. Perennial Phlox succeed in almost 
any soil enriched with manure, but are much benefited 
by a mulching of decomposed manure in spring, and in 
hot weather an occasional soaking of water. If the first 
spikes of bloom are removed as soon as over, and the 
plants given a good soaking of water, they will produce 
a second supply of flowers, thus continuing the display 
until late in autumn. These later blooms are often finer 
than the first. 
