Gardenside Nurseries, Inc., Shelburne, Vt. 
Perennial Plants 27 

are dormant, and can be moved with per- 
fect safety. The prices given represent our 
expected charges for 1941, but we reserve the 
right to change before shipping time. If not 
priced, regular plant rates apply. 
Atrosanguinea maxima. Large dark red, with 
stiff erect stems. $1.50 each. 
Australia. Massive flowers of ox blood or 
Spectrum Red. $1.50 each. 
Barr’s White. Large pure white flowers with 
purplish black spots. $1.00 each. 
Beauty of Livermere. An early, deep velvety 
red sort, not large but permanent. 
Betty Ann. A new American variety, with a 
beautiful crinkled flower of La France Pink, 
without spots. $1.00 each. 
Cavalier. Very erect, and quite tall. A deep 
bright red flower. 
Cerise Beauty. A brilliant cerise pink. Large, 
strong growing. 50 cts. each. 
Cheerio. Shell pink, with a pure red blotch 
that shows clear through. $1.00 each. 
Cowichan. Large rich carmine red. $2.50 each. 
Delicata. Old rose pink, or nearly lavender, 
when open. $1.00 each. 
Enfield Beauty. Large cherry pink flower on a 
tall erect stem. 50 cts. each. 
Fairy. A pale pink of medium size, and a pro- 
fuse bloomer. 
Flanders Fields. Maroon, shaded crimson. 
Glowing Embers. A deep brick red, with a 
touch of orange. Large heavily crinkled 
flowers, of fine texture. 
Gold of Ophir. The orange yellow poppy. Must 
stand more than one year to show its true 
color. 
Henri Cayeux. Old rose, shading into bur- 
gundy. 50 cts. each. 
Jeanne Mawson. Lovely peach pink. A vigor- 
ous and large flowered sort of easy culture. 
John III. A dainty flower of coral pink, with 
a crinkled texture that lasts as long as the 
flower. $2.50 each. 
Joyce. <A _ bright rose cerise. Sturdy erect 
stems. 
Julia Buck. Large deep coral pink flowers, on 
rigid stems. 35 cts. each. 
Lord Lambourne. A _ glowing bright red, with 
deeply incised petal edges. $1.00 each. 
Lulu A. Neeley. Medium size flowers, late in 
the season, of glowing dark red. 
Magnificus. Deep old rose, later than H. 
Cayeux. $1.00 each. 
Manchu’s Fan. Glowing scarlet, with heavy 
green bracts. $2.00 each. 
Mrs. Perry. The standard salmon pink. Per- 
manent. Large flowers. 
Negrillon. Bordeaux and lavender. Needs shade 
to develop best. 50 cts. each. 
North Dakota Gold. We offer this for the first 
time. We think it nearer golden yellow, than 
is Gold of Ophir. $1.00 each. 
Princess Ena. Small coral pink blooms, like 
tulips. 
Proserpine. Chinese red, with a very dark 
center. Tall, late, free flowering. 
Rose Beauty. Most nearly true rose. $1.00 
each. 
Silver Blick. Salmon pink, with delicate base 
markings. Better than Mrs. Perry. 
Spotless. <A beautiful soft pink, without any 
marking. 
Tangee. Bright pure orange. The showiest 
sort we have. 
Thora Perry. Not a large white, but large 
enough. Quite the best sort we have seen 
under our conditions. 50 cts. each. 
Watteau. Pure coral pink, low and profusely 
flowering. 
Welcome. Deep scarlet, with a shaggy black 
center. Early. 35 cts. each. 
Wunderkind. Large flowers of brilliant carmine 
rose. $1.00 each. 
Wurtembergia. Enormous dinner plate like 
blooms, of dark scarlet. 35 cts. each. 
PARONYCHIA. Whitlow-Wort. Low plants, 
of simple culture, for carpeting in the rockery. 
They grow in any good soil, and form at- 
tractive mats of foliage. 
argentea. Only a few inches high, with woolly 
foliage, and with tiny flowers hidden between 
white bracts, which give the entire plant a 
silvery color from June, on. 
PATRINIA. We can’t tell you anything about 
this plant family. It isn’t mentioned in our 
references. The culture is simple, in any 
warm light soil, and in the garden they make 
fine showy masses, or are useful for cutting. 
rupestris. Through July and August, this 
looked much like a yellow flowered Baby’s 
Breath. 
PENSTEMON. Beard-Tongue. Mostly North 
American natives, this family has long been 
grown in gardens, yet still lacks recognition. 
In it are some very easily cultivated plants 
of great value for the border, or for cutting. 
Others as valuable for low edgings, or for the 
rockery. All are showy, and hardy. Almost 
any soil grows them well. 
barbatus, Pink Beauty. To 3 feet from a flat 
tuft of foliage, the slender stems carry for the 
top third of their height a profusion of little 
pendant pink tubular flowers, like tiny fire- 
crackers. 
barbatus, Torreyi. Like the preceding, but the 
flowers are brightest scarlet. 
crandalli. A woolly mat, not over 8 inches 
high, covered with blue, in June. 
grandiflorus. The leaves are in a cluster at the 
ground. Stem, 2 feet high rises above them, 
and carries a large number of large bells, 
almost like Foxgloves, of a fine lavender blue. 
July. 
utahensis. May grow 2 feet high, but the stems 
are not strong, and it makes a heavy mat, 
covered with carmine flowers over a long 
period in summer. 
All Perennial Plants 25 cts. each, $2 for 10, $18 per 100 unless otherwise noted, 
POSTPAID east of the Mississippi; add 5 PERCENT WEST. Five 
of one kind or variety exactly alike at 10 rate. 25 at 100 rate. 
