Liatris Phlox subulata Viola 
GYPSOPHILA. Baby’s Breath. 
Paniculata compacta. Feathery sprays of 
minute white flowers, forming a beautiful, 
gauze-like appearance. Blooms in August and 
September. It is partial to lime and averse to 
disturbance. Full sun. 2 to 3 ft. 
Paniculata flore-pleno. A light and graceful 
cut-flower. The masses of minute, double 
white flowers, when cut and dried, retain their 
beauty for many months. 35 cts. each, $3 
per doz. 
♦Repens rosea. A creeping edging or rock- 
garden plant with grassy foliage and tiny pink 
flowers on wiry stems. In bloom for many 
weeks. 
HELIANTHEMUM. Rock or Sun Rose. 
Mrs. Earle. Charming variety with fine double 
scarlet flowers like little red roses. 
♦Mutabile. Exceedingly pretty, low-growing, 
evergreen plants, forming broad clumps. 
Dainty, rose-like flowers, varying from pink 
and white to yellow. Well adapted for the 
border, rock-garden, or dry, sunny banks. 
Light, sandy soil. 
HIBISCUS. Mallow. See page 20. 
HOLLYHOCKS. 
These require rich, well-drained, medium soil, 
deeply dug, and full sun. Best results are ob¬ 
tained from vigorous young plants that have 
not yet flowered, and orders will be filled with 
this stock. 
Double, Newport Pink, White, Bright Rose, 
Salmon. Separate colors. 15 cts. each, $1 
per doz. 
HYPERICUM. St.-John’s-Wort. See page 20. 
IBERIS. Candytuft. 
♦Little Gem. Dwarf, pure white flowers in 
May. Glaucous blue foliage. Its uniform, 
neat habit makes it one of our best rock or 
edging plants. 6 in. 
♦Sempervirens. Very dwarf. A sheet cf white 
flowers completely covers its rich, dark green 
foliage in spring. A particularly fine rock- 
plant. When plants become straggly, trim 
them into shape directly after flowering as you 
would a dwarf shrub. 
LIATRIS. 
Pycnostachya. Tall spikes of lavender-lilac 
flowers in late summer. 1-yr. plants only, 
$1.50 per doz. 
LEONTOPODIUM. Edelweiss. 
♦Alpinum. A well-known alpine having at¬ 
tractive, starlike clusters of woolly leaves sur¬ 
rounding small, inconspicuous yellow flowers. 
Of interest as the most famous rock-plant 
from the European Alps. Requires full sun 
in elevated, well-drained position dry in 
winter. 35 cts. each, $3 per doz. 
LINUM. Flax. 
Flavum. A handsome, bushy, leafy perennial, 
with clear yellow flowers of great beauty. 
l X ft. 
♦Perenne. Beautiful pale blue flowers on slen¬ 
der, graceful stems, with feathery foliage. 
Suitable for dry, sunny borders or rock- 
gardens in sandy or average, well-drained, 
light soil. 1 ^ ft. 
LINARIA. Toad-flax. 
♦Alpina. Graceful little trailing plant with 
curious little flowers like tiny snapdragons. 
Colors range through shades of rose, pink, 
lavender, and purple. Excellent for the 
rock-garden. 
LUPINUS. Lupine. 
Stately, beautiful perennials with bold, mas¬ 
sive, 3- to 4-foot spikes of pea-shaped flowers in 
May and June. They require a well-prepared 
garden soil and warm, sheltered, semi-shady 
position. 
Polyphyllus. Clear blue. 
Polyphyllus alba. Pure white. 
Polyphyllus roseus. New. Flowers of beauti¬ 
fully shaded rose. 
MYOSOTIS. Forget-me-not. 
Alpestris, Victoria. Large heads of azure-blue. 
Alpestris, Ruth Fisher. True forget-me-not- 
blue. One of the largest flowered. 
♦Palustris semperflorens. Rich blue flowers 
in dainty sprays. A charming, everblooming 
variety that is at home in a shaded border or 
rock-garden or by the waterside. 10 cts. each, 
$1 per doz. 
♦Palustris, Pink Beauty. Pink-flowered form 
of the above. 
PHLOX SUBULATA. Moss or Mountain Pink. 
Early, spring-flowering type, with moss-like, 
evergreen foliage hidden under masses of bloom 
during the flowering season. 
♦Alba. Pure white. 
♦Lilacina. Light lilac. 
♦Rosea. Bright rose. 
Field-grown clumps, 25 cts. each, $2 per doz. Pot-grown plants, 15 cts. each, $1.50 per doz., 
except where noted 
