12 KIMBERLY NURSERIES, KIMBERLY, IDAHO 
AMBASSADEUR—4 ft. Large red flow- 
ers, bronze foliage. 
SHENANDOAH — 4 ft. Salmon pink, 
ruby red foliage. 
STATUE OF LIBERTY—6-7 ft. Blaz- 
ing flame red, bronze foliage. 
WYOMING — 5 ft. 
bronze foliage. 
Orange flowers, 
HARDY PERENNIAL PLANTS 
The following perennials are all freshly dug, strong two-year roots that are sure 
to bloom to first season. 
ACHILLEA (The Pearl)—1 ft. Pure 
white double flowers all summer. Good 
for cutting and drying. 20c each. 
ANTHEMIS (Hardy Marguerite)—2 ft. 
Daisy-like yellow blossoms produced 
all summer. Excellent for cutting. 
Thrifty grower. 20c each. 
ASTERS (New Dwarf)—Without excep- 
tion everyone who sees these new 
dwarf asters, imported from England, 
admire them. The blooming season 
starts in Sept. and lasts until frost. 
There are literally hundreds of blooms 
in the most delicate shades of Laven- 
der, Pink and Lilac. They are truly 
dwarf, rarely exceeding 1 foot. 
Lilac Time—Deep violet blue. 
Nancy—Lively flesh pink. 
Snow Fairy—Lovely double white. 
Blooming size plants 50c each. 
ASTILBE AMERICAN—Beautiful pink 
blooms with bluish cast. Fine cut 
flower. 50c each. 
BABY BREATH (Bristol Fairy)—2 ft. 
A grated form of Baby Breath produc- 
ing full double white flowers all sum- 
mer. Should be in every perennial 
garden. 2 year plants 60c 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)—83 ft. 
This old-fashioned garden flower, with 
long racemes of graceful, heart shaped, 
pink flowers, is very attractive and 
always appreciated. Good for shade. 
Blocms in May and June. Divisions— 
40c, 3-5 eye plants—60c, 3 year roots 
—75¢c each. 
BLUE FLAX (Linum)—1 ft. A desirable 
plant for the border or rockery. Cov- 
ered all summer with blue flowers. 
15c each. 
BROWN-EYED SUSAN (Rudbeckia)— 
2-3 ft. Rich golden yellow flowers with 
central brown disc. 15c 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. 
The Famous Cushion Mums 
The new low growing Mums, forming: 
mounds of blooms, reminding one of the 
old fashioned Azalea. The plants grow 
about 18 inches high and have a spread 
of about 2 ft. All late summer and fall 
they are literally covered with hundreds 
of flowers. 
BRONZE CUSHION (New) — Reddish- 
bronze flowers turning to bronze yel- 
low. A thing of beauty. 40c each. 
WHITE CUSHION (New)—Flowers open 
a very delicate pink turning to snow 
white. 40c each. 
YELLOW CUSHION—Same as above 
only bright clear yellow. 
PINK CUSHION—This variety was the 
first color in the Cushion Mums to be 
introduced and is still the most popu- 
lar of all. 40c¢ each. 
CORAL (Valeriana) — Showy heads of 
old rose flowers in umbels on 12 inch 
stems just above the rich green foli- 
age, are produced from June until Oct. 
A very beautiful perennial. Around 2 
ft. high. 50c each. 
COREOPSIS—2 ft. Large, orange yellow 
flowers on long graceful stems. About 
the best yellow cutting flower. B!ooms 
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. 
Plants make a house a home 
S—. Ss 
