Colonial Plcuali for Your Rockery 
Build and Enjoy a Rock Garden—These Plants Are Very Inexpensive 
and Will Give You Many Happy Hours—Only 20c Each; 3 for 55c; 
7 for $1.00/ 
Postpaid 
A Beautiful Rockery is Easily and Cheaply Constructed 
ALL OF THESE PLANTS ARE HEAVY TWO-YEAR FIELD GROWN 
PLANTING. In plant¬ 
ing, dig a hole large 
enough to receive the 
roots of the plant without 
crowding, and break up 
earth well at bottom of 
the hole. Partially fill 
with earth, and pack 
earth around roots firm¬ 
ly, repeating operation 2 
or 3 times, until hole is 
filled and the plant firm¬ 
ly imbedded in it. Water 
the bed thoroughly after 
the planting is completed. 
ALYSSUM. 8 to 12 inches. July to September. 
Bright yellow flowers. Excellent for rockeries. 
ARABIS ALPINA (Rock Cress). Small white flow¬ 
ers in great masses. Will spread over rocks or 
ground. A necessary plant in all rockery work. 
CAMPANULA CARPATICA. Dainty bell-shaped 
blue blossoms borne on graceful short stems 
which nestle in among the rocks. Fits well in 
any rockery planting. 
GYPSOPHILA REPENS (Trailing Baby's Breath). 
Misty, tiny white blossoms trailing in among the 
rocks. 
IBERIS (Hardy Candytuft). Dwarf plant with 
evergreen foliage; completely hidden by dense 
heads of snowy white flowers in early spring. 
VERONICA RUPESTRIS. Prostrate creeper, forms a 
dark green carpet of shiny foliage. Tiny deep 
blue flowers in late April. Grows 2 inches high. 
HARDY VIOLAS (Hardy Pansy). Prolific bloomers 
and valuable in rockeries or for border work. 
We can furnish them in blue or yellow. 
IRIS PUMILA (Dwarf Iris). These fine, colorful 
little Irises do not grow over 6 inches high, and 
bloom in April and May. Fine for rockery or 
bordering beds. 
PRIMULA VERIS (Hardy Primrose). Fine low- 
growing plant coming in mixed shades of yel¬ 
low, red and pink. 
PHLOX SUBULATA (Moss Pink). A necessity for 
the rockery and excellent for covering banks, 
etc., where grass will not grow. Pretty moss¬ 
like green foliage. A mass of bright bloom in 
early spring. & 
SAPONARIA (Soapwort). Beautiful creeping bor¬ 
der and rockery plant. Foliage dark and waxy. 
Rosy pink blooms produced in profusion in May 
and early June. 
FESTUCA GLAUCA (Blue Fescue). Dwarf, orna¬ 
mental grass with distinct blue-green foliage. 
Height 4 inches. A good plant for border or 
rockery. 
SPECIAL OFFER £|50 
We will send you one of each of the ■ I *** 
12 rock plants as described above, all I Post- 
2-yr. field grown, for only paid 
Cotoneaster Horizontalis 
SPREADING EVERGREEN 
for YOUR ROCKERIES 
COTONEASTER HORIZONTALIS. One of the 
finest spreading plants yet found for the 
rockery. It may almost be classed as a pros¬ 
trate shrub. Small, ovate, deep green waxy 
leaves. The branches will trail out over 
ledges or rocks, and it remains green the 
year around. Hundreds of bright red berries 
come in late summer and remain all winter. 
A beautiful sight. 
We have a nice stock of these and will sell them 
at these low prices while they last. Heavy rooted, 
8 to 12 inches, only 75c each; 3 for $2.00, post¬ 
paid. 
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