Nursery Grown Wild Flowers 

Four-leaved Milkweed 
Blue Phlox 


Giant Sarsaparilla 
MILKWEED, Four Leaved 
One of the most delicate and beautiful of all 
summer-blooming woods flowers. White with dark 
green leaves. Difficult to transplant. Native of 
deep woods, Maine to Alabama. 
ORCHIS, Showy 
Dainty, decorative, small orchid growing only 4 
to 12 inches high. Purple and white flowers rising 
from thick, green leaves appear May and June. 
Native of the rich woodlands, Canada to Kentucky, 
westward to Missouri. 
PARTRIDGE BERRY; Twinberry; Squawberry 
An ideal evergreen creeper, flowers waxy white, 
blooming in April, May, June, followed by bright 
red berries. Native of the woods, Canada to Florida. 
PHLOX, Blue 
Light blue flower, 2 to 8 inches high, appears 
July to September. Should be planted in drifts on 
gentle wooded slopes. Native from Pennsylvania to 
Florida, westward to Kansas. 
PITCHER PLANT; Sidesaddle Flower 
More interesting than beautiful, but with showy, 
reddish-brown blooms and pitcher green and brown 
leaves. Native of wooded bogs, Canada to Florida. 
QUAKER LADY; Bluets 
Delicate, light blue flower is one of the joys of 
May. Prefers open wood and grassy slopes. Is native 
from Canada to Georgia and westward to Missouri. 
RATTLESNAKE PLANTAIN 
Beautiful evergreen, pale green and white leaves 
make this plant a favorite the year round. Incon- 
spicious, whitish blooms appear in July and August. 
Native of dry woods, Maine to Florida, westward to 
Minnesota. 
SARSAPARILLA 
A smaller and less showy plant than the Giant 
Sarsaparilla but most desirable for its habit of adorn- 
ing large boulders. 
SARSAPARILLA, Giant 
The rich, dark purple berries gleaming against the 
vivid green foliage of this plant make it a joy of 
the late summer woods. Delightful flower clusters 
appear earlier but are not as showy as the fruit. 
Ze 

Partridge Berry 

Pitcher Plant 

Rattlesnake Plantain 

