MONARDA 
DIDYMA CAMBRIDGE SCARLET. Very pretty plants, 2 to 
3 feet tall, throwing their pretty brilliant scarlet flowers in 
dense heads during July and August. 
10 cents each; $1.00 per doz. 
*NEPTA 
(Ground Ivy) 
MUSSINI. A dwarf plant useful for edging the border or walk 
and is suitable for massing in rockery. Foliage is silvery gray. 
Plant covered with hundreds of little lavender-blue flowers 
in spring and intermittently all summer. 8 inches high. 
8 cents each; 85 cents per doz. 
★PACHY SANDRA 
(Japanese Spurge) 
TERMINALIS. A pretty golden evergreen trailing plant that 
will thrive in shade, growing 6 to 8 inches high. A fine rock 
garden plant, also used to cover unsightly places. 
12 cents each; $1.25 per doz. 
PENSTEMON 
(Beard Tongue) 
The varieties we list of these showy perennials are thoroughly 
hardy. They fit into the border plantings, supplying bright 
colored flowers for long periods. I recommend them highly. 
BARBATA COCCINEA. Scarlet with yellow blooms on a tall 
graceful spike. 
7 cents each; 75 cents per doz. 
BARBATA PRAECOX. Pink to cherry red on pretty spikes. 
A desirable cut flower. 
7 cents each; 75 cents per doz. 
PHLOX 
(Hardy) 
These beautiful plants are 
the most popular of all peren¬ 
nials. They produce many 
flowers, last well and are 
thoroughly hardy. Blooms 
from July to frost when the 
faded blooms are removed. 
They cannot be surpassed for 
the show of color they pro¬ 
duce in mid-summer. 
BEACON. A brilliant, cherry 
red. 
B. COMETE. Purple or wine 
color. 
BRIDESMAID. White with 
red eye. 
COMMANDER. Brilliant, 
deep crimson red. 
JULES SANEAU. Dwarf, 
large flower, pure pink. 
MILLY YON HOBOKEN. Pure soft pink, large flower. 
MISS LINGARD. Large, white, excellent foliage. 
RHEINLANDER. Beautiful pink, deep red eye. 
R. P. STRUTHERS. Rosy carmine with claret eye. 
RYNSTROM. Deep pink, tall growing. 
THOR. Deep salmon pink with red eye. 
WIDAR. Reddish violet, white margin. 
YON LASSBURG. Large pure white. 
12 cents each; $1.25 per doz. 
*PHLOX SUBULATA 
(Moss Pink) 
These beautiful rock plants cannot be surpassed. During 
the flowering season in April and May they are just one 
18 
