Snyder Bros. (Inc.), Center Point, Iowa 
Other Hardy Perennials 
INULA ensifolia, 1 to IV 2 ft. Yellow flowers, July-August. 
LAVENDER, Munstead var., 30c: IV 2 ft. Spikes of lavender July-August. 
Fragrant. 
LEUCORINUM montana, 8 in. Bulbs. Fragrant white flowers April-May. 
LILIUM, Lilies. Mostly require well-drained, deep soil. Depth to plant is 
noted last. 
—bulbifera, 25c: 3 ft. Orange-red, May. 5 in. 
—canadensis flavum, 40c: 3-4 ft. Nodding, yellow, red spotted, June. 5 in. in 
peaty soil. 
—elegans, 25c: 2 ft. Orange-red, May-June. 5 in. Easiest to grow. 
—elegans Leonard Joerg, 40c: 2-3 ft. June. A rich apricot variety. 8 in. 
—regale, The Regal Lily, 15c, 20c, or 30c, according to size. All are blooming 
sizes. Large white trumpets shaded pink. July. One of the best. 9 in. 
—superbum, Turk’s Cap Lily, 25c: 4-6 ft. Reddish-orange, July. 5 in. in 
peaty soil. 
—tenuifolium, Coral Lily, 15c, $1.00 per 10. l 1 /^ to 2 ft. Waxy, recurved, coral 
red flowers on slender stems. May. Bulbs always small. 6 in. 
—tigrinum, Tiger Lily, 25c: 3-4 ft. July-August. Orange spotted black. 9 in. 
—tigrinum flora plena, 30c: Double Tiger Lily. 3-4 rows of petals. 9 in. 
—umbellatum, 25c: 2 to ft. Umbellate heads of upright flowers, dark red 
shaded orange, June. Very easy to grow. 8 in. 
LILY OF THE VALLEY. A choice large variety. 
LINARIA dalmatica, 18 in. Pure yellow, July-September. 
LINUM perenne, Hardy Flax. 1 to 2 ft. Light, graceful foliage and stems. Pale 
blue flowers each morning, June-September if cut down occasionally. 
LUPIN, 30c: 2 to 3 ft. Spikes of pea-shaped flowers. Random colors, blue, 
white, or pink. Prefer cool, moist soil without lime. 
LYCHNIS viscaria. 10 in. Heads of bright pink in June-September. 
LYTHRUM roseum superbum, 25c: Purple Loosestrife. 3-4 ft. Branched spikes 
of rosy purple July-August. For moist or wet places. Quite shrubby. 
MONARDA, Wild Bergamot, 2 to 3 ft. A rose colored form. July-August. 
NEPETA mussini, Ground Ivy, 1 ft. Compact, beautiful foliage, lavender-blue 
flowers, constantly. A splendid rockery or wall plant. 
—Souv. de Chandrous, 1 ft. Upright, dark blue flowers. 
PACHYSANDRA terminalis, Japanese Spurge. 6 to 8 in. Glossy, light green 
foliage. Evergreen. A splendid ground cover for shade. Acid soil. 
PENTSTEMON barbatus. Spikes 3 to 4 ft., bright scarlet, June-August. 
—glaber, 25c: 1 ft. Splendid rich blue. June. 
—grandiflora. Spikes 2 ft., lavender-blue flowers. June. A splendid cut flower. 
Dry soils in sun only. 
PHLOX—multiflora, 25c: A mat of pale lilac, early. Humus soil. 
—subulata, Moss Phlox. All low spreading plants, fine for rockery or border. 
- atrolilacina. Deep lilac. 
-atropurpurea, 25c: Purplish red. The darkest variety. New. 
- Blue Hill. A new blue variety, blooms early and again late. 
- Fairy. Pale blue with dark purple eye. Blooms some all fall. 
-lilacina, Lilac. Light lilac. The strongest growing variety. 
- rosea, Rose Pink. The commonest and only variety many know. 
- vivid, 25c: Vivid pink. The best dwarf pink. Slow-growing. 
-White. A mass of white flowers very early. 
—suffruticosa, Miss Lingard, 25c: Pure white, very large, long trusses, and 
very early. Dark, glossy green foliage. 2 ft. 
*PRICES unless noted: 20c each, $1.65 per 10, $15.00 per 100. See page 33. 
37 
