HARDY PERENNIAL 
PEONIES 
One of the best-known and most enduring perennial 
flowers. Very showy and long-lasting blooms. 
Edulis Superba. Bright rose-pink; fragrant. Early 
flowering. 50c each. 
Felix Crousse. Crimson, globular flowers. 75c each. 
Festiva Maxima. Very early. Dazzling white flowers. 
One of the finest varieties. 50c each. 
Mme. Jules Elie. Immense, bomb-shaped flowers of 
silvery lavender-pink. Very handsome. 75c each. 
Officinalis rubra. The old-fashioned “Piney.” 
Blooms earlier than other varieties. Crimson. 75c 
each. 
HARDY PHLOX 
One of the finest of the summer-blooming perennials 
which grows 3 to 4 feet high, producing immense heads 
of fragrant, long-lasting flowers. Really the backbone 
of the summer garden. 
Eiffel Tower. Pink. 
Enchantress. Salmon-pink. 
Ethel Pritchard. Lavender-blue. 
Firebrand. Vermilion. Color illustration on page 24. 
Jules Sandeau. Pink. 
Lilian. Cameo-pink. Color illustration on page 24. 
Morgenrood. Bright rose. 
Mrs. Jenkins. White. 
Rheinlander. Salmon-pink. 
R. P. Struthers. Salmon-pink. 
Special French. Blush-pink. 
Von Hochburg. Crimson. 
Any of above, 2-yr., 20c each; 12 for $2.00 
GARDEN PINKS 
A form of the Sand Pinks growing 10 to 12 inches tall 
with small gray foliage. Both single and double flowers. 
Splendid rockery plants. 15c each; 12 for $1.50. 
PYRETHRUM (Painted Daisy) 
Ferny foliage with long-stemmed daisy flowers in 
May and June, ranging from white through pink to 
deep red with yellow centers. 20c each; 3 for 50c. 
PLANTS, continued 
RANUNCULUS 
Repens flore-pleno. A trailing plant with quantities 
of bright golden yellow, double flowers in May. 20c 
each. 
RUDBECKIA 
Purpurea (Giant Purple Coneflower). Huge, daisy- 
like flowers of peculiar reddish purple, with a superb 
bronzy cone in the center. Fine for cutting in late 
summer. 20c each; 3 for 50c. 
SALVIA 
Farinacea. A bushy plant with long, slender, droop¬ 
ing spikes of pale blue-violet flowers throughout the 
season. 15c each; 4 for 50c. 
Leucantha. Attractive, compact-growing plants 4 to 
5 feet tall, with numerous ascending laterals. The 
flower-spikes are about 5 inches long, of rich violet- 
purple calyces and white flowers which pop out at 
intervals from the colored calyces. A very fine 
tender perennial blooming late in the season. See 
color illustration on page 25. 35c each; 3 for $1.00. 
EARLY GIANT IMPERIAL STOCKS 
A fine strain of these lovely spring flowers. Plants 
should be set out in autumn for early spring bloom, or 
very early in the spring for early summer bloom. 
Canary-Yellow. Attractive shade. 
Elk’s Pride. Royal purple. 
Lavender. Extra fine. 
Rose. Deep rose-pink. 
White. 
Any of above, 10c each; 12 for 75c; 100 for $5.00 
SINGLE SWEET VIOLET 
Prince of Wales. Lovely true blue Violets with a 
delicious scent. 15c each; 12 for $1.50. 
SWEET WILLIAM 
An old-fashioned perennial plant with flat heads of 
fragrant flowers in many colors. 10c each; 6 for 50c. 
Rock-Garden Plants 
20c each; 12 for $1.50, except where noted 
Alyssum saxatile compactum. Broad masses of 
bright yellow flowers in spring. 
Arenaria montana. Creeping plant with glistening 
white flowers an inch across, in May. 
Armeria Laucheana. Grassy plant 3 Inches high with 
ruby-crimson heads on stiff, wiry stems. 
Campanula carpatica. The Harebell makes a tuft 
of interesting foliage with bright blue flowers, face-up 
on wiry stems all summer. 
Cerastium tomentosum. Silvery white foliage and 
dazzling white flowers in spring. A trailer. 
Chrysanthemum, Red Riding Hood. Button type 
with small, red blooms. Plants 10 inches high. 
Dianthus deltoides. Grassy mats of foliage with erect 
stems bearing a profusion of dark pink flowers in 
midsummer. 15c each. 
Gypsophila repens. Beautiful trailing plant with 
clouds of tiny white flowers in July and later. 
Helianthemum. Shrubby little plants with white, 
yellow, orange, and pink flowers in midsummer. 
Heuchera sanguinea (Coral Bells). Hairy, thread¬ 
like stems with small, scarlet, bell-like flowers. 
Phlox subulata. A mossy plant starred all over in 
early spring with dazzling, close-set flowers in several 
shades: Alba, pure white; Rosea, bright pink. 20c 
each; 3 for 50c. 
Rosa Rouletti. A dainty little plant with rose-pink 
flowers less than an inch in diameter. Splendid for 
rock-gardens. Smallest Rose in the world. 50c each. 
Saponaria ocymoides. Bushy, prostrate plant 8 inches 
high, making masses of tiny rose-pink flowers. 
Thymus Serpyllum (Trailing Thyme). Creeping 
mat of green, aromatic foliage; fragrant violet flowers. 
Tunica Saxifraga. Tufted, grassy plant with pale 
pink flowers in loose, lacy sprays. 
Veronica rupestris. Fine, creeping plant burled in 
early summer under a cloud of blue flowers. 15c each. 
Zephyranthes rosea (Zephyr Lily). A bulbous plant 
with grassy foliage and brilliant pink, lily-like flowers 
in midsummer. 15c each; 4 for 50c. 
SEDUMS 
15c each; 12 for $1.25 
We have the following varieties of this valuable 
family so necessary in any rock-garden. 
Acre (Golden Moss), creeping, yellow; Aizoon, 
1 foot, yellow; Aizoon, Variegated, green and white 
foliage; Brilliant (spectabile), 1)4 feet, soft red; 
Glaucum, 2 inches, creamy flowers with black anthers; 
Kamtschaticum, 9 inches, orange-yellow; Pulchel- 
lum, 1 foot, yellow; Reflexum, 1 foot, white. 
VestaVs Greenhouses, end to end, tvould be IV4 miles long 
30 
JOS. W. VESTAL & SON, Box 871, Little Rock, Ark. 
