LINARIA (Toad flax). 
Cymbalaria— (Mother of Thousands) (E) Suitable only for 
rockeries, bearing lavender flowers on trailing plants. Perhaps 
you know it as Kenilworth Ivy. 
LINUM (Flax) (D) 
Alpinum—A lovely alpine of prostrate feathery foliage, having 
frail pendulous showers of pale blue bells throughout the 
summer. 
Perenne —(B) The perennial flax, suitable either for the 
border or the rockery. Flowers of pale blue on wiry stems 
throughout the entire summer. Equally good for rocks, but is 
seen to advantage only when planted en masse. 
LUPINUS (Lupine) 
Majestic and beautiful perennial, with a bewildering range of 
soft colorings, which needs well drained, slightly acid soil. It 
abhors lime, and cannot get enough water. 
Polyphyllus (D) Blue—Clear blue in June. Growing three 
or four feet in a clump nearly as broad. 
Polyphyllus —(F) 
Moerheimi Hybrids —Pink. 
Polyphyllus —White. (F) 
Polyphyllus —(G) 
New Regale Hybrids. Varied pastels. 
LYCHNIS (Campion) (D) 
Viscaria Splendens —Profusely blooming old fashioned per¬ 
ennial, 8 to io inches in height, with colorful pink blossoms 
in June and July. 
LYSIMACHIA (Moneywort) (C) 
Mumularia —Long fingered, rock clinging, green tendrils with 
bright yellow florets in June. Easy, but needing watchful 
restraint. 
MATRICARIA (Feverfew) (B) 
Golden Ball —Small yellow buttony flowers in profusion on an 
attractive plant, amenable to the most ordinary conditions. 
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