26 
KALLAY BROTHERS, PAINESVILLE, OHIO 
HARDY PHLOX 
Graf Zeppelin. A new calico-type; a good grower, very 
free flowering, with no fading or suffusing of color; pure 
white with vermilion eye. Each 20c; 10 for $1.75. 
Ethel Pritchard. A beautiful self shade of rose-mauve. 
One of the extra fine new sorts, and would be a rare, solid, 
true lavender, were it not for a certain luminuos warmth 
which gives it a livelier expression. Each 20c; 10 for $1.75. 
Marechal French. A new European introduction of dignity 
and merit. Tall, erect, prolific of massive flower heads; deep 
scarlet with blood-red eye. Each 20c; 10 for $1.75. 
Mia Ruys. A much branched dwarf type not over 18 
inches high, producing extra large flowers and trusses of 
pure waxy white. Each 20c; 10 for $1.75. 
Milly van Hoboken. Shell pink with silvered reverse and 
varying mauve suffusion, the general color effect brightly 
enriched by the carmine eye. Large, shapely trusses and 
florets. Each 20c; 10 for $1.75. 
Paladin. One of the best of our most recently acquired 
French phloxes. The truss is broadly imposing, the rounded 
florets, a warm, salmon pink wtih a large, cherry-red eye. 
Each 20c; 10 for $1.75. 
Von Hochberg. A recent novelty of extra size and depth 
of color; liquid amaranth-red. Altho neither crimson, or¬ 
ange or scarlet—we consider this the richest, most impres¬ 
sive of all red phloxes. Each 20c;, 10 for $1.75. 
0 
Widar. New, and one of the best of the distinctly two- 
color varieties; free blooming and consistent. Light reddish 
violet, with a striking white sunburst at center. Each 20c; 
10 for $1.75. 
DWARF PHLOXES 
Subulata. (Moss Pink.) Low-spreading stems and nar¬ 
row, moss-like leaves; flowers pinkish purple with darker 
center, produced in wonderful profusion in April and May. 
Makes fine edgings. Each 20c; 10 for $1.75. 
Hardy Garden Pinks. Pronounced spicy fragrance, beauty 
and dense, grass foliage. 1 foot. Elsie. Bright red with 
maroon center. Elizabeth Peters. Single flowers, long sum¬ 
mer season, dark red with maroon center. Gertrude. White, 
variegated with maroon. Jean. (Everblooming.) White 
with purple center. Each 20c; 10 for $1.75. 
Platycodon Grandiflorum. (Balloon Flower.) Blooms con¬ 
stantly from July until late in September; flowers large, 
bell-shaped, in numerous loose racemes. Blue or White. 
Each 15c; 10 for $1.25. 
Plumbago Larpente. (Lead-wort.) An attractive edging 
plant of evenly rounded and dense growth, about 12 inches 
high. The tiny leaves of apple green are a rich setting for 
spikey red buds, and clusters of phlox-like cobalt blue 
flowers late in summer. Each 20c; 10 for $1.75. 
Primula Veris. The true English Primrose, with fine 
clusters of very fragrant spring blossoms in a wide range 
of colors. Each 20c; 10 for $1.75. 
Rudbeckit “Golden Glow." 5 to 7 feet; early summer 
until frost. Flowers golden-yellow. Purpurea. (Purple 
Cone-flower.) Large drooping petals colored reddish purple, 
with a remarkably large, cone-shaped center of brown, thick¬ 
ly set with golden tips in spiral lines. 2 to 3 feet, each 
25c; 10 for $2.00. 
Salvia—Azurea Grandiflora. (Meadow Sage.) A hardy 
species of Salvia, very pretty in August and September with 
its profusion of skyblue flowers. Spreading, 2 to 4 foot 
plants, with swaying flower wands which arch gracefully 
clear from the crown. Each 25c; 10 for $2.00. 
Stokesia Cyanea. (Stoke’s Aster.) One of the most 
charming hardy plants, freely blooming from July to Octo¬ 
ber. Flowers of Centaurea shape, often measure 4 to 5 
inches across. 1% to 2 feet. Blue or white. Each 20c; 
10 for $1.75. 
f 
Tradescantia Virginica Alba. (Spiderwort.) Plants about 
2 feet tall, with richly green foliage and clustered white 
blossoms an inch wide; in bloom all summer. Each 20c; 
10 for $1.75. 
Tritoma Pfitzeri. (Red Hot Poker.) Rush-like foliage 
supports smooth, thick flower stalks a yard long, with a 
single fiery cone at the top. Brilliant scarlet, the opened 
lower petals trimmed with orange. July-September. Must 
be carefully protected or else carried dormant in dry sand 
during winter. Each 25c; 10 for $2.00. 
Veronica Longifolia Subsessilis. (Speedwell.) A 3 foot 
border plant with attractive foliage of distinct character, a 
roughened bronze-green. Flowers are borne abundantly dur¬ 
ing July and August, in long, compact spikes. Deep blue. 
Each 25c; 10 for $1.75. 
Yucca Filamentosa. (Adams Needle or Spanish Bayonet.) 
A stately foliage and flowering plant, always conspicuous. 
The broad, sword-like foliage is evergreen; supporting a 
showy display of pendant creamy-white bells. Each 25c; 
10 for $2.25. 
Variegated Leaf Yucca 
Hacker’s Variegated Leaf Yucca. Derived from Yucca 
Filamentosa, and conforming closely thereto in form, habit, 
and panicled bloom—which first occurs at three years on 
a rigid 3 to 4-foot stalk. The surrounding bayonet-like 
leaves are dark, bronze-green at center, breaking up with 
minor stripes to a broad outer edge of yellow. This foliage 
is permanent, assuming a contrastive purple tinge against 
winter’s snow. A very striking punctuation plant among 
solid colors for summer show, and ranking with evergreens 
for winter usefulness; perfectly hardy in extremes of either 
cold or heat. Strong 1 year Diants. Each 50c: 10 for $4.50. 
