RARE PERENNIALS, ALPINE PLANTS 
33 
PHLOX —Continued. 
Rokoko —Large individual flowers of lilac- 
pink self in globular heads. Med. 25c 
each. 
Rosenkavalier —Large trusses of rose red. 
Good green foliage and mildew resistant. 
Tall. 35c each. 
R. P. Struthers —An old favorite. Bright 
rosy carmine or watermelon red flowers, 
which have a claret red eye. Tall. 25c 
Saladin — A very bright colored Phlox. 
Very large flowers of glowing orange- 
scarlet with deep red eye. Tall. 35c 
each. 
Salmon Glow — Just what the name im¬ 
plies; large flowers of a salmony glow. 
Tall. 25c each. 
Salome —Rather deep salmon with a crim¬ 
son center. Med. 35c each. 
Septemberschnee (September Snow)—Lat¬ 
est white with a faint pink blush in the 
center. Tall. 35c each. 
Siebolds Scarlet — A bright scarlet. 25c 
each. 
Snowcap — Broad pyramidal panicle, the 
large florets effectively arranged to form 
a huge cap of snowy white. Tall. 35c 
each. 
Snowdrift — A seedling of the preceding 
and resembling it very much. Some¬ 
what taller and sturdier. 25c each. 
Spatrot —(Late Red) Compact trusses of 
vermilion red flowers. Med. 35c each. 
Spatrote —Received under this name but 
certainly not true to color, as it is a very 
brilliant color, difficult to describe. Prob¬ 
ably a salmon red would be closest. A 
very good bloomer and “stood out” in 
our large field of Phlox as one of the 
most colorful. Tall and late. 50c each. 
Special French — Soft pink with a rosy 
center. Tall. 25c each. 
The Governor —A husky grower with large 
flowers of a purplish blue or lavender. 
Best for light shade. Tall. 35c each. 
Thor —Deep salmon pink, overlaid with a 
scarlet glow. A light halo surrounds 
the analine red eye. Tall. 25c each. 
Tigress —An outstanding Phlox with huge 
trusses of orange scarlet flowers in pyr¬ 
amids built up by long branched laterals, 
giving an unusually long period of bloom. 
Tall. 50c each. 
Unique —Large panicles of deep lilac flow¬ 
ers. In our opinion the best of its color. 
Demand continues to be greater then 
the supply. Tall. 50c each. 
Wm. Watson —Very large flowers of soft 
pink with carmine eye. Med. 35c each. 
Collection No. 1— 
Beacon 
Betty Lou 
Eliz. Campbell 
Prof. Schliemann 
Rijnstroom 
Snowdrift 
The Governor 
Wm. Watson 
Collection No. 2— 
B. Compte 
Feuerbrand 
Geo. Stipp 
Hauptman Koehl 
Jules Sandeau 
Morgenrood 
Mrs. Jenkins 
Thor 
Collection No. 3— 
Count Zeppelin 
Erntefeuer 
Karl Foerster 
Leo Schlagater 
Mrs. Ethel Prichard 
R. P. Struthers 
Salome 
Special French 
Each collection worth $2.30. Your choice 
of any one for $2.00; any two, value 
$4.60, for $3.80, and all three, value 
$6.90, for $5.50. The above are all first 
grade varieties and plants, and not culls. 
We reserve the right to substitute in 
case short in any variety, but will send 
two plants for each one substituted. See 
page 1 for postage. 
PHYTEUMA *comosum —A very rare spe¬ 
cies from the Dolomites. Jagged leaves 
and stemless heads of curiously-beaked 
flowers of mauve-blue, with darker tips. 
Will thrive in any deep soil of rich limy 
loam on the rockwork, perfectly 
drained. 3 inches. Only a few plants to 
spare. $4.00 each. 
*scheuchzeri —A rare rock-loving plant, re¬ 
quiring full sun, in well-drained posi¬ 
tion, with soil composed of stone chips 
or gravel and some leaf-mold and silt 
or good loam. Deep violet blue flowers 
in rounded heads on slender stems, 8 to 
12 inches long, from May to July. 50c 
each. 
PLATYCODON grandiflora —(Balloon Flow¬ 
er) Allied to the Campanula and form 
neat, branched bushes of upright habit, 
with large showy, blue flowers, from 
June to Aug. 2 to 3 ft. 25c each. 
grandiflora fl. pi. —Double flowering form 
of the preceding, the flowers resembling 
a six-point star. Two year old plants, 
50c each. 
Maries — A compact dwarf species with 
violet-blue flowers on 12 to 15 inch stems. 
25c each. 
