PURDY'S CALIFORNIA BULBS AND PLANTS 23 
COTYLEDONS arc thick-lcavcd rock-plants and both interesting and pretty. A set 
of three at 15 cts. each. 
AMERICAN COWSLIPS, or DODECATHEONS. Among the earliest of the spring 
flowers of California, are these beautiful cyclamen-like rock-plants. There are a number 
of wild varieties, and I ofi'er the Hendersonii from the north, a very hardy plant with 
beautiful rich, reddish flowers. The roots are handled dry. 4 cts. each, 40 cts. per doz. 
DODECATHEON CLEVELANDII is a southern California species and a real 
acquisition. The stems often grow to 2 feet, and the flowers are white, delicately rose 
tinted, with brown beak. It is very fine grown in adobe. Dry roots. 15 cts. each, $1.25 
per doz. 
CYNOGLOSSUM grande is the Hound's Tongue of our woods, and a handsome 
early flower, dark blue, like forget-me-nots, on stems a foot or more high from a leafy 
base. 15 cts. each, $1.25 per doz. 
DELPHINIUMS. Sec Larkspurs. 
DENDROMECON rigidum is the Bush Poppy of California. It grows from 4 to 10 
cct high, with whitish branches and light green leaves, and produces a great abundance 
of light yellow flowers, very much like the Eschscholtzia or California Poppy. A well- 
grown plant makes a very fine shrub. 50 cts. each. 
DICENTRA formosa is the California Bleeding Heart and a most attractive plant 
for shaded places. The heart-shaped flowers are pink, and the leaves fern-like. 15 cts. 
each, $1.25 per doz. 
EPILOBIUM spicatum, or Fire Weed, is a handsome plant allied to the Godetias, 
with tall stems and many rosy magenta flowers. 15 cts. each, $1.25 per doz. 
THE ERIOGONUMS of the Pacific Coast are a wonderfully varied genus, includ- 
ing a multitude of forms, many of which are very ornamental. They inhabit the driest 
of places, even the desert region, and are admirable plants for dry rockwork or other dry 
positions. I ofi^er E. fasciculatum, which forms a bush 3 to 5 feet high, with a very 
large number of flower-clusters in the shape of a yellow ball. 25 cts. each. 
HEUCHERAS arc the very best plants for either shaded rockwork or moist, shaded 
spots in the garden. They harmonize perfectly with ferns or fall anemones, never 
become weedy, and hold on for years. The foliage is fine, and the flowers give just that 
touch of color needed to enliven a fern-bed. They are also good in the open sun on the 
edging of any flower-bed, and, in fact, make a most excellent edging. 
H. micrantha is the wild California Alum Root, or Wild Geranium, and a splendid 
plant in every way. In fall it colors beautifully and the leaves last long. The panicles 
of tiny white flowers are very attractive in mass. 15 cts. each, $1.25 per doz., $7.50 
per 100. 
H. rubescens is a plant that attracts as much attention as any in my garden. It 
forms strong, massed colonies by sending out prostrate stems, and in flower is a cloud 
of soft pink. The flowers are really the colored caly.ves and stay fresh a surprisingly 
long time. For cutting as bouquet greens they are most excellent. As rock-plants or 
edging for a hardy bed they are very fine. 15 cts. each, $1.25 per doz. 
HOUND'S TONGUE. See Cynoglossum. 
HYPERICUM Scoulerii is a beautiful St. John's-Wort which prefers wet soil. It 
grows a foot or two high, with yellow flowers and many golden stamens. 15 cts. each, 
f 1.25 per doz. 
H. concinnum, an exquisitely pretty, low-growing plant, with golden yellow flowers 
and golden stamens. It forms low groups of great beauty. 15 cts. each, $1.25 per doz. 
IRISES are well represented on this coast, and as pretty as the best of the world's 
sorts. I offer the following: Bracteata, light yellow; Douglasiana, from crearn to purple; 
Longipetala, tall, light blue; Watsoniana, light blue to purple, strong growing; Tenax, 
low, with blue flowers; Tenax, in yellow; Purdyi, cream lined with purple, very fine. I 
have garden plants of all at 25 cts., and collected plants at 15 cts. each, $1.25 per doz. 
LARKSPURS, or DELPHINIUIylS are plants that California is rich in, and with 
one exception they are sorts the roots of which become perfectly dry in summer and 
which can be handled like bulbs. For dry roots, sec my California Bulb Catalogue m the 
fall. All except Scopulorum can be shipped dry in the fall. 
Growing plants as follows: 
D. cardinale, the giant Scarlet Larkspur of southern California grows often 3 to 4 
feet high, and as much as 8 feet. Scarlet-orange flowers. 25 cts. each. 
D. Emilae grows about a foot high, with very pretty, light clear blue flowers in May. 
Our best blue sort. 10 cts. each, 75 cts. per doz. 
