24 
PETRIE LANDSCAPE NURSERIES 
A. verna —Splendid rock plant for mat¬ 
ting in crevices and cracks in the rock. 
Makes dense tufted mass. 
Armenia lauchleana —Sea thrift. Dwarf 
tufty evergreen with rosy bloom of 
wiry stems. 
Artemesia lactiflora —A hawthorne scent¬ 
ed tall grower blooming in fall. 
A. Silver King —With silvery white foli¬ 
age. 
ASTERS 
Aster alpina —Dwarf hardy asters about 
eight inches high blooming in late spring 
in blue and white forms. 
A. alpina —Goliath. A larger form in blue 
purple .$ .30 
A. amelhis —Beauty of Ronsdorf. A sum¬ 
mer bloomer of good size and deep 
lavender color . $ .35 
A. amelhis elegans —A compact grower 
with bluish lavender flowers in July 
and August. 
A. farrerri —Big Bear. A new and very 
scarce dwarf hardy aster with violet 
flowers 3 inches across in June.$ .50 
A. sub coeruleus —Star of Eisenach. An¬ 
other rare variety. Bright lavender 
blue with yellow centers. Four inches 
across and thirty inches tall $ .35 
NAMED VARIETIES 
Barr’s Pink —Large flowered pink. 
Blue Gem —Dark blue, semi-double. 
Brightest and Best —Blue. 
Climax —Tall lavender blue. 
Elta —Pale lilac, semi-double. 
Feltham Blue —Popular dark blue. 
Gray Lady —Exquisite opal shade, semi¬ 
double. 
Gold Flake —Dwarf yellow more like a gol¬ 
den rod. Rare .$ .30 
Joan Vaughn —Deepest blue, semi-double. 
Lady Lloyd —Fine clear rose pink. 
Nancy Ballard —A deep purplish mauve. 
Queen Mary —Pleasing blue tinted laven¬ 
der. 
Roseum superbum —Almost a red. 
Royal Blue —The name describes it. 
White Climax —Pure white. 
Astilbe —Some of the newer named varie¬ 
ties with lovely pink or white 
plumes .$ .60 
Aubretia —Large Flowering hybrids. Good 
dwarf creeper giving sheets of rose, 
crimson, and violet color. Good with 
Arabis or Alyssum. 
Baptisia australis —False Indigo. Dark 
blue lupine-like flowers in June. Good 
pea-like foliage all summer. 
Calaryiintha alpina —A rich purple mem¬ 
ber of the mint family. Six inches 
tall. 
CAMPANULA 
The Bell Flowers 
C. alliariaefolia — A grand border plant 
with tall spikes of long pendent white 
bells from June on. Available in fall. 
Three feet .$ .50 
C. Bononiensis —Small blue flowers borne 
profusely on slender stems in June. 
Two and one half feet. Available in 
fall .$ .35 
C. Cidlinmore —A lovely hybrid of carpat- 
ica, but more profuse in blooming. Many 
shades of blue all summer long.$ .35 
Small plants .15 
C. glomerata-superba —An old European 
favorite about 18 inches tall with close¬ 
ly knit blossom heads of deep blue pur¬ 
ple .$ .25 
Clumps .35 
Campanula glomerata acaulis —Is similar 
to the above but only attains about six 
inches height. Good rock garden addi¬ 
tion. 
C. lactiflora coerulea —Pale blue flowers 
in July and August on two to three 
foot stems. Half shade. Available in 
fall. 
C. medium calycanthema pink —The cup 
and saucer type of Canterbury Bell 
Each .$ .20 
C. perscifolia —Telham Beauty. The larg¬ 
est of the peach leafed bellflowers with 
large China blue bells on two foot stalks. 
June .$ .35 
C. pusilla —A very dwarf semi-trailing 
form of lilac blue color from June to 
August. Available in fall . $ .50 
C. Pyramidalis —Lovely star shaped blue 
flowers on spikes three feet or more in 
height .$ .30 
C. rotundifolia — The Scotch blue bell. 
Small blue bells nearly all summer. 
C. turbinata — A large flowering sub¬ 
species of carpatica with blue or white 
blooms nearly two inches across. 
Cerastium tomentosum —A trailer with 
white flowers and grey foliage. 
Chrysanthemum maximum Alaska —Shas¬ 
ta Daisy .$ .20 
C. chrysanthemum koreanum —Koreanum. 
A perennial daisy from Korea blooming 
out white and fading pink. Hardy and 
very late .$ .20 
CHRYSANTHEMU M S 
NAMED SORTS 
These Chrysanthemums are the results of 
years of selection for Idaho conditions 
and can be recommended highly. There 
is a large range of color and all bloom 
before severe freezing weather. 
A. Barnham —Orange bronze. 
Alice Howell —Orange yellow single. 
Boston —Bronzy red. 
Champaign —Ruby red. 
