WOLCOTT NURSERIES 
Each. Doz. 
HYPERICUM—St. John’s Wort 
Hardy Perennial 
Very ornamental plants, especially valuable in the 
rock garden. Their foliage is attractive, habit good and 
their late flowering makes them especially desirable. 
They prefer a rich, sandy loam and if given partial 
shade, the blossoms last longer. 
H. Coris —One of the jewels of the race, forming- 
spreading tufts of blue foliage covered with cups of 
clear gold on thread-like stems of 6 or 8 inches, the 
numerous stamens giving them a sky-rocket effect. 
Especially fine for the rockery. 
1.00 
10.00 
H. empetrifolium—Very similar to H. Coris but the 
stems are branching and the petals fall when they are 
finished, which those of H. Coris never do. 
.75 
7.50 
H. olympicum —Upright growth, about a foot high. 
Leaves grayish green; flowers large, golden yellow. 
Very handsome .$ .50 
$ 5.00 
H. polyphyllum —Rare. Glaucous foliage. Flowers 
yellow in dense terminal cymes. In bloom all summer 
.75 
7.50 
H. repens —Exceedingly choice, prostrate variety, bear¬ 
ing a profusion of golden yellow blossoms. Fine for 
the rockery . 
.50 
5.00 
H. Reptans —Beautiful, absolutely prostrate variety, 
forming a perfect sheet over the rocks, covered with 
enormous roses of gold, the outside petals being var¬ 
nished with mahogany, the center having the charac¬ 
teristic shower of stamens. A gem every rock gar¬ 
dener should possess . 
1.00 
10.00 
IBERIS—Candytuft 
Hardy Perennial 
The evergreen Candytufts rank high among the 
rock-garden flowers. They are of half-shrubby growth 
and in April and May become smothered with bloom. 
Ordinary well-drained soil suits them and they never 
look better than when planted above some rock ledge 
so that the growth may hang over its face. 
