WILD BROS. NURSERY CO., SARCOXIE, MO. 23 

Phlox give brilliant summer effects. 
Phlox 
Phlox give brilliant summer effects, brightening the garden 
just after the spring flowers are gone and before summer flowers 
arrive in abundance. Large heads of 5-petaled, delightfuly fra- 
grant flowers on stems 1% to 3 ft. high. Use Miss Lingard for 
fate May and early June, and other varieties will continue the 
display through the first half of July. Cut the flowers as they 
fade and they give a second, sometimes a third crop. Masses of 
six or more of each color produce imposing effects. Plant 12 
to 15 in. apart, 8 to 12 in if in a single row, in rich, rather 
moist soil, deeply prepared. Do not allow seedlings to crowd out 
the original plants. 
Field grown plants to bloom the first summer, 20c each, 3 
for 55c, $2.00 per doz., except as noted. If by parcel post add 
10c per doz. 
Champs Elysee. 
Daily Sketch. Light salmon-pink, faint carmine eye; large 
trusses and individual flowers. 
Rich purple, compact heads. 
Firebrand. Brilliant cerise, vermillion and orange; of medium 
height; blooms freely. 
Hauptman Koehl. 
strong stems. 
Lillian. 
early. 
Miss Lingard. Early white with faint lilac eye; truss large 
and often 8 to 10 in. long: fragrant. 
Mrs. Jenkins. 
Glowing red; large compact trusses; 
Exquisite cameo-pink; florets large; blooms freely; 
Pure white; very large trusses. 
Mrs. R. P. Struthers. One of the best: clear. bright cherryred. 
darker eye; large, heavy truss, stems slender but strong; tall. 
P. D. Williams. 
Starlight. 
Bright pink, deeper eye; large. 
Violet-red shading to lilac, white eye. 


‘a 
Sweet William (Page 24) 

Columbine (Page 22) 
Strong field grown plants $2.00 per dozen. 
Phlox subulata; Moss Pink; Ground Pink 
Beautiful in the rock garden; useful for carpeting and edging. 
Of dwarf, spreading habit, forming dense mats of tiny, narrow, 
somewhat moss-like evergreen leaves % in. long, almost hidden 
in April and early May with small clusters of 5-petaled flowers 
about %4 in. across, standing 2 to 6 in. above the ground. 
Adapted to full sun; tolerates partial shade. Plant about | ft. 
apart. Pink and white. 20c each; 3 for 45c; $1.50 per doz. 

Phlox subulata or Moss Pink, covered in April and early May 
with small clusters of pink flowers an inch across 
Poppy, Oriental; Papaver orientale 
Should be planted in August or September. Write us in 
summer for prices. 
Sedum; Stonecrop 
‘‘Among the most ‘rocky’ of rock plants:’’ excellent between 
the rocks, along walks, in walls and other places where few 
plants thrive; a dainty edging for flower beds or borders; use- 
ful for their variety of foliage, differences in flowers forms and 
seasons and the dwarf habit of many varieties; easily grown in 
almost any soil if well drained in winter. 
Sedum kamtschaticum. Starry orange-yellow flowers %4 in. 
across in flat clusters 1 to 3 in. across on stems 6 in. high in 
early June, and at intervals during summer. Deep green leaves 
1% in. long. Succeeds in partial shade. 15c each, 3 for 40c, 
$1.50 per doz. 
Sedum sarmentosum. Slender creeping shoots, covered in late 
May with bright yellow starry flowers % in. across. Leaves 
% to % in. long. Growth rapid; easily grown, in sun and dense 
shade. Useful for edging rockeries, walks and walls where few 
plants thrive. 15c each, 3 for 40c, $1.50 per doz. 
