WEST NEWBURY, MASS. 
89 
*Linum flavum. (Golden Flax). Light graceful foliage 
and pale yellow flowers which appear all summer. 18 
inches. 30 cents each. $3 per dozen. 
*Linum perenne. (Hardy Flax). Beautiful porcelain-blue 
flowers. 24 inches. Midsummer. 
* Lobelia cardinalis. (Cardinal Flower). Long spikes of 
intense red. 3 feet. July and August. 
*Lobelia syphilitica. (Great Lobelia). Spikes of deep 
royal purple; very attractive. 2 feet. September. 
Lupinus polyphillus. (Lupin). Long spikes of showy 
flowers in June and again in September. Blue, white, 
and pink. 3 feet. 
* Lychnis chalcedonica. (Maltese Cross). Brilliant scar¬ 
let flowers in close heads. June to September. 12 to 
18 inches. 
Lychnis haageana. (Catchfly). Showy dwarf plant about 
one foot high with scarlet flowers about 2 inches 
across. Does well in partial shade. July. 
* Lychnis viscaria. (Campion). Spikes of bright pink 
flowers appear in June and July. Good for cut flow¬ 
ers. 1 to 2 feet. 
*Mertensia virginica. (Virginia Bluebell). Beautiful sky- 
blue flowers with an occasional pink tint. 18 inches. 
Early May. 
*Myosotis palustris. (Forget-Me-Not). No garden com¬ 
plete without this beautiful blue flower. 3 to 6 inch¬ 
es. May to October. 
Nepeta mussini. (Catmint). A dwarf compact-growing 
plant with, a mass of beautiful lavender flowers dur¬ 
ing the summer. 6 inches. 
*Oenothera missouriensis. (Evening Primrose). Large, 
deep, buttercup-yellow flowers spotted with red. 9 
to 12 inches. June to September. 
* Oenothera youngi. Large, bright yellow. 12 to 18 inch¬ 
es. June to September. 
*Papaver nudicaule. (Iceland Poppy). Beautiful blos¬ 
soms the entire season, of yellow, white and orange. 
12 inches. 
Papaver orientale. (Oriental Poppy). Large, brilliant 
scarlet flowers. 3 to 4 feet. May and June. 
Papaver o. Mrs. Perry. Large, salmon-pink with apricot 
shades. The best of the “pink” varietiesi 3 feet. 
May and June. 
Penstemon barbatus. (Beard Tongue)’. Medium spikes of 
deep scarlet-red. 2 feet. June to August. 
Penstemon digitalis. Large spikes of white flowers, some¬ 
what resembling foxglove. June and July. 2 to 3 
feet. 
Phlox amoena. A low-growing, spreading variety cov¬ 
ered with a multitude of delicate pink flowers in 
spring. Excellent for rockery. 6 inches. 
Twenty-five or more plants, shrubs or trees of one size and of one 
variety, at the one hundred rate. 
