26 THE SARCOXIE NURSERIES PEONY FIELDS 

Phlox gives brilliant summer effects. 
Lily, Day, continued. 
Ophir. Waxy, golden-yellow, 5 in. across and 6 in. long; 
fragrant; tall; many flowers. 50c each. 
Rajah. Mahogany-red, shading to orange throat; delicate 
fragrance; very large; blooms profusely. One of the best of 
this color. 1.50 each. 
Sovereign. Soft chrome-yellow, outside shaded brown. 
Thunbergi. Light lemon-yellow flowers on 2 to 3 ft. stems 
in latter summer; delicate fragrance; often opens in the eve- 
ning. 
Phlox 
Phlox brighten the garden just after the spring flowers are 
gone and before summer flowers arrive in abundance. Large 
heads of five-petaled, delightfully fragrant flowers on stems 
114, to 3 ft. high. Use Miss Lingard for late 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 seedling to crowd out the 
original plants. 
Field grown plants to bloom the first summer, 30c each, 
3 for 85c, 3.00 per doz., except as noted. If by parcel post 
add 10c per doz. 
Champs Elysee. Rich purple, compact heads. 
Daily Sketch. Light salmon-pink, faint carmine eye; large 
trusses and individual flowers. 
Firebrand. Brilliant cerise, vermilion and orange; of me- 
dium height; blooms freely. 
Hauptman Koehl. Glowing red; large trusses; strong stems. 
Lillian. Exquisite cameo-pink; large; blooms freely; early. 
Miss Lingard. Early; white with faint lilac eye; trusses 
large and often 8 to 10 in. long; fragrant. 
Mrs. Jenkins. Pure white; very large trusses. 
P. D. Williams. Bright pink, deeper eye; large. 
R. P. Struthers. One of the best; clear, bright cherry-red, 
darker eye; large truss, strong, slender stems; tall. 
Starlight. Violet-red shading to lilac, white eye. 
Phlox subulata; Moss Pink; Ground Pink 
Charming dwarf plants of spreading habit, forming dense 
mats of tiny, narrow, somewhat moss-like leaves 1 in. long, 
almost hidden in April and early May with small clusters of 
five-petaled flowers 34 in. across on stems 2 to 6 in. high; 
beautiful in the rock garden, for carpeting and edging; adapt- 
ed to full sun; tolerates partial shade; plant about 1 ft. apart. 
Pink and White, 25c each, 3 for 50c, 2.00 per doz. 
Strong field-grown plants, $3.00 per dozen. 
Pyrethrum—See Daisy, Painted 
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; 
useful 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 3/ 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 134 in. long. Succeeds in partial shade. 20c¢ each, 
3 for 50c, 1.75 per doz. . 
Sedum spectabile Brilliant; Showy Stonecrop. The rosy-red 
starry flowers 2 in. across are produced freely in large flat- 
topped clusters on 18 in. stems in latter September and early 
October. Leaves light bluish-green, thick, broad, 3 in. long. 
25c each, 3 for 65c, 2.25 per doz. 

Missouri Sales Tax 
Missouri customers please add 2° sales tax, or such 
amount as the Legislature may hereafter enact. We are re- 
quired to collect this and remit to State Auditor. 

Sedum spectabile Brilliant. 
