18 
KIMBERLY NURSERIES, KIMBERLY, IDAHO 
Bleeding Heart 
ANTHEMIS (Hardy Marguerite)—2 ft. 
Daisy-like yellow blossoms produced 
all summer. Excellent for cutting. 
Thrifty grower. 20c each. 
ASTERS (Michaelmas Daisy)—3-5 ft. 
Autumn flowering plants, blooming in 
a riot of color, usually until snow. 
Colors: White, red, blue, orchid and 
purple. 25c each. 
ASTILBE AMERICAN—Beautiful pink 
blooms with bluish cast. Fine cut 
flower. 25c each. 
BABY BREATH (Gypsophila)—2-3 ft. 
Small flowers on branched stems, so 
thick as to give the plant a white lace- 
like effect. 15c each. 
BABY BREATH (Repens)—Dwarf pink¬ 
ish white. Splendid in rockeries. 25c 
each. 
BABY BREATH (Statice, sea lavender) 
—2 ft. Dense, branching plumes of 
deep blue flowers. Splendid for use in 
bouquets and drying. 35c each. 
BLEEDING HEART (Dicentra)—3 ft. 
This old-fashioned garden flower, with 
long racemes of graceful, heart shaped, 
pink flowers, is very attractive and 
always appreciated. Good for shade. 
Blooms in May and June. Divisions— 
40c, 3-5 eye plants—60c, 3 year roots 
— 75c each. 
BLUE FLAX (Linum)—1 ft. A desirable 
plant for the border or rockery. Cov¬ 
ered all summer with blue flowers. 
15c each. 
BOCCONIA (Plume Poppy)—6-8 ft. A 
hardy perennial, large foliage with 
clusters of creamy white flowers in 
August. 15c each. 
BROWN-EYED SUSAN (Rudbeckia) — 
2-3 ft. Rich golden yellow flowers with 
central brown disc. 15c each. 
CARNATION—1-2 ft. Double flowers, 
mixed colors, bloom all summer. 20c 
each. 
CARNATION (Crimson King)—1-2 ft. 
The new, free flowering, double, red 
carnation. Flowers much larger than 
common carnation. 40c each. 
CHRYSANTHEMUM—2-3 ft. Double 
Aster-like flowers. Fall blooming. Col¬ 
ors: red, bronze, white, pink and yel¬ 
low. 25c each. 
CHRYSANTHEMUM (Pink 
Cushion) — The finest out door 
Chrysanthemum grown. Dwarf 
rounded habit of growth. Pink flow¬ 
ers blooming from August until 
hard freezing weather. Prefers sun. 
Highly recommended. 2 yr. plants. 
40c each. 
COREOPSIS—2 ft. Large, orange yellow 
flowers on long graceful stems. About 
the best yellow cutting flower. Blooms 
all summer. 15c each. 
COLUMBINE (Aquilegia)—2-3 ft. A 
wonderful mixture containing all the 
beautiful tints and tones and color 
combinations. Long spurred, mixed 
colors. 20c each. 
CORN LILY (Hemerocallis)—2-3 ft. A 
strong growing and free flowering 
variety, producing orange-yellow flow¬ 
ers, throat specked with black. Blooms 
in early summer. 15c each. 
DAPHNE CNEORUM (Garland Flower) 
—A low growing, pink flowering ever¬ 
green plant. Flowering in spring and 
fall. Good for the rock garden. 2 yr. 
50c each. 
DELPHINIUM (English Hybrids)—4-5 
ft. This variety produces spikes of 
semi-double light and dark blue flow¬ 
ers. 15c each. 
GAILLARDIA (Blanket flower)—1-2 ft. 
In lovely shades of orange, yellow and 
red, blooms all summer and fall. 15c 
each. 
GEUM (Mrs. Bradshaw)—1-2 ft. A 
splendid variety, with large, double 
flowers of a fiery red, blooming nearly 
all summer. 25c each. 
HIBISCUS (Mallow)—4 ft. Shrub-like 
plants with handsome green foliage, 
bearing throughout summer large, 
bright flowers, from three to five 
inches in diameter. August-September. 
Very hardy. Colors: red, pink, white. 
40 cents each. 
IRIS (German)—Avoid planting too 
deep, barely covering the rhizomes 
(creeping root stems) being sufficient. 
They are great drought resisters. “S” 
refers to standards, “F” to falls. 
It’s not a home until it’s planted. 
