TOLLESON NURSERIES 
I, ILIUM, TENUIFOLIUM 
(Coral Lily)—Slender growing 
18 inches high, bright scarlet 
flowers. Very pretty. 35c each. 
LINARIA DALMATICA (Ken¬ 
ilworth Ivy)—This erect peren¬ 
nial grows to a height of 3 to 4 
feet. Its bright yellow flowers 
form a loose spike. Leaves are 
glaucous. 
*LINUM PERENNE (Peren¬ 
nial Flax) Hardy Flax is noted 
for its fine feathery foliage and 
the delightful blue flowers which 
are fresh each morning. 
LUPINE —Stately plants with 
3 ft. spikes of pink or blue, pea¬ 
shaped flowers. 
LYCHNIS CHALCEDONICA 
(Maltese Cross)—Three feet. 
Heads of vivid scarlet flowers. 
Blooms for a long time. Lathyrus 
LYTHRUM, ROSEUM SUPERBUM (Loosestrife)—Very showy 
rosy purple spikes about 2 or 3 feet high, produced in profusion all 
summer. Excellent for banks of streams and ponds. 
PARDANTHUS BELAMCANDA (Blackberry Lily) — Star¬ 
shaped flowers of orange color, spotted black, on 24 inch stems. 
The clusters of shiny seeds in the fall resemble blackberries. 
PHLOX, DECUSSATA (Hardy Phlox)—Are more attractive when 
separated as to color, using the white varieties between. 
PHLOX, BEACON —Brilliant cherry 
red flowers on strong 36-inch stems. 
One of the best of this color. 
PHLOX, CHAMPS ELYSEE —Pur¬ 
plish-red. 
PHLOX, PANTHEON— Deep salmon 
rose. 
PHLOX, PROFESSOR VIRCHOW 
—Scarlet. 
PHLOX, RIVERTON JEWELL— 
Deep rose-pink, rose-red at center. 
PHLOX, VON HOCKBERG- —Bril¬ 
liant amaranth-red. 
PHLOX, RIJNSTORM —Lovely rose 
pink much like the color of the Paul 
Neyron rose. 
PHLOX, R. P. STRUTHERS —Bril 
liant rosy red, crimson center. 
PHLOX, SPECIAL FRENCH —Beau¬ 
tiful clear pink. 
PHLOX, THOR —One of the best. 
Salmon pink with small analine red 
eye. Free flowering. 
PHLOX, IN COLORS UNNAMED 
—Pink, purple, white. 
*FHLOX, SUBULATA (Creeping Phlox)—In the spring this 
plant is a mass of blooms. It is splendid for rock gardens and for 
edging. Pink or white. 
PLATYCODON, GRANDIFLORUM (Balloonflower)—White or 
blue. An old time favorite, forming a dense branching plant of 
upright habit; flowers 3 inches across, 
duced at the tip of each branchlet. 1 to 
2 feet. June, July. 
POPPY, ORIENTAL (Papaver Orien- 
tale)—Mammoth flowers of brightest 
crimson. May and June. 
PYRETHRUM (Painted Daisy)—As¬ 
sorted colors. The Painted Daisy 
sends up large daisies of white, through 
pink to red color from a tuft of finely 
cut leaves. Early Summer 
* RANUNCULUS (Buttercup)—Yel¬ 
low. Fine large, double yellow. One 
foot. May, June. 
RUDBECKIA, PURPUREA (Pur¬ 
ple Coneflower)—Purple flowers with a 
large brown, cone-shaped center. 3 
feet. Blooms July to October. 
SALVIA, AZUREA (Azure Sage) — 
A Meadow Sage from the Rocky Moun¬ 
tains that has gone round the world. 
Produces a profusion of azure blue 
flowers in August and September. 
blue or bluish white, pro- 
Phlox 
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