10 KAYLOR NURSERIES, LAKEWOOD, WASH. 
AY A ers Rene eee een = = ee 
Perennials 
They are musts in any well balanced 
planting. Year after year they provide 
harvests of fine flowers with but little 
attention beyond cultivating and a feed- 
ing of well rotted manure or compost. 
Our plants are field grown, strong and 
ready to produce crops the first year if 
planted early. Three plants of a kind at 
two and one-half the single price. We 
pay the postage. 
Anemone, Queen Charlotte. 
Ccouble light pink of large size, 35c. 
Anemone, Whirlind. About Same as 
Queen Charlotte except pure white in 
color. 35c. 
Columbine. Kaylor’s Blue Beauty. A 
true perennial of our own development. 
Large bushy plants bearing hundreds of 
long-spurred lavender-blue flowers with 
snow-white cups. The largest Columbine 
we have ever seen and the most prolific 
bloomer. Large plants, 50c; divisions, 35c. 
Delphiniums. We have a very fine lot 
of these in two- and three-year-old plants 
and a wide range of colors. Cannot sup- 
ply separate colors but the field was 
“rogued” and all inferior plants dce- 
stroyed. Large plants, 50c each. 
Dicentra. Old-time Bleeding Heart, 50c. 
Esther Reed, Shasta Daisy. Fully double 
white flowers resembling Chrysanthe- 
mums from early summer to late fall if 
Kept cut. Flowers three inches across on 
stems about 15 inches tall. Plants 35c, 10 
—$2.00. 
Gypsophila, Bristol Fairy. The double 
Baby’s Breath. Large roots, $1.00. 
Gypsophila, Colorado. Not so tall as 
Bristol Fairy but much denser with 
double white flowers. Large roots, $1.00. 
Helianthus, Loddon Gold. Full centered, 
Dahlia-like flowers up to five inches in 
Giameter on upright plants up to four 
feet tall. Long stems and if they are kept 
cut they will produce from July until 
killed by frost, 35c. 
Incarvillea, Hardy Gloxinia. A most 
beautiful and interesting perennial. Glox- 
inia-like trumpets in rosy-purple start 
opening low on the ground and the stems 
grow So rapidly that by the time they are 
fully open they are more than two feet 
tall, 45c. 
Phlox, Gefion. Medium tall, large red 
and white, 35c. . 
Be Phlox, Gen. Petain. Very large deep red, 
oC: 
Phlox, Miss Lingard. Tall strong grow- 
er making a large plant with hundreds 
of large white flowers, 40c. 
Semi- 
Phlox, Rising Sun. Deep salmon or 
medium red. Large and tall, 40c. 
Phlox, Fuerbrand. Firebrand. Good 
name for this large firey red, 40c. 
Phlex, Rosalinda. Soft pink. Lots of 
flowers on small stems over a long Sea- 
son, 35c¢. 
Phlox Sublata of Moss Phlox 
Creeping, moss-like foliage which, dur- 
ing blooming season, is hidden by mass- 
es of flowers. Fine for rock walls or for 
carpeting ground. It is evergreen. 
Fireking. A fine red colored sort, 35c. 
Rosea. Medium pink color, 35c. 
Vivid. Brighter than Rosea with deep- 
er eye. A rare kind, 40c. 
Alba. White. A snow bank when in 
bloom, 35c. 
Statice. Also called Sea Lavender, or 
Blue Babys Breath. Clusters of small lav- 
ender flowers on medium ‘tall stems. 
Much admired as bouquet filler, 40c. 
Stokesia, Stoke’s Aster. Blue Moon. 
Very large light blue flowers with a 
touch of lavender, on foot stems, 30c. 
Stokesia, Cyanea. Our own develop- 
ment of this beautiful sort. Deeper blue 
than Blue Moon, 30c. 
Thelictrum. Pyramedial clusters of lav- 
ender and gold flowers on tall stems. 
Roth flowers and foliage fine for bouquet 
fillers. Large plants, 40c. 
Trollius, Globe Flower. Lots of garden- 
ers are overlooking a fine thing here. 
Grows to two feet, produces golden globe 
shaped flowers over a long season, 40c. 
Tritoma, Red Hot Poker. The leaves 
are long, pointed and evergreen. The 
stem reaches a height of three feet and 
carries a long tapering spike-like head 
of glowing orange-red petals. Large di- 
visions 35c. 
Hardy Chrysanthemums 
If a variety dies out during the winter 
we drop it from our list. All those listed 
have proven hardy and we consider them 
fine for either garden display or for cut 
flowers. Our plants are from root cut- 
tings. 
Autumn Sunlight. Early, pure golden- 
yellow. Medium tall. 35c. 
Autumn Lights, 18 inches tall. Bushy, 
semi-double, fine copper-bronze with 
gleaming orange overcast, 35c. 
Barbara Small. Lilac-pink, brighter at 
margin, carmine center. Medium tall, 50c. 
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