xViola hallii. Cut leaf, bi-color. Upper petals 
dark purple, lower petals cream. 4-in. 
Varied habitat. Sandy loam, full sun or light shade. 
xV. adunca. Rounded leaf, blue flowers. 5 in. 
Woodlands. Half-shade, fairly light loam. 
xV. praemorsa. Long upright leaf, large yellow 
flower. 4 to 6 in. Best native yellow species. 
Brushy foothills. Loam or clay loam, half shade or sun. 
x V. occidentalis. Long upright leaf. White, 5 in. 
Grows only in bogs. Sun or light shade. 
V. cuneata. Creeping root, ovate leaf. Upper 
petals purple on back, paler face. Lower petals 
white, with dark central zone. 4 in. 
Open hill slopes. Gritty loam, sun or light shade. 
V. ocellata. Resembles cuneata, larger. 6 in. 
Conifer forests. Rich loam, shade. None too reliable. 
V. glabella, purpurea, sheltoni and lohata are 
yellow flowered woodlanders. V. howelli and 
palustris are blue to white, woodlanders. V. 
blands, white, bog plant. Can supply others 
from Oregon-Northern California only. 
FOLIAGE PLANTS. 
Postpaid prices: 20c each, three of one kind 50c, 
dozen of one kind $1.50, dozen mixed $2. 
Asarum caudatum. Ginger. Large dark green 
leaves, odd brownish flowers. Aromatic. 8 in. 
A. hartwegi. Variegated leaf. Both creepers. 
Shady woods, in rich pine-leaf mold, moist. 
Heuchera micrantha. Long creeper roots, large 
incised leaves, massed. Tiny flowers on thin 
naked 15-in. stems. Likes steep rocky slopes. 
H. micrantha—variegated. Var. of above. 
H. cylindrica. Smaller green leaves. Yellowish 
green flowers on 12-in. stems. Rock bluffs. 
Heucheras are especially useful as temporary fill-ins here 
and there, being easily suited, easily moved and easy to 
divide. Fine for erosion stoppers. Prefer half-shade. 
Micromeria douglasi. Small mint-scented vine 
with slow-creeping roots. Evergreen. 2 ft. long. 
Loamy soil, light to heavy shade. Best used as drapery 
on slopes, ground cover over large bulbs, etc. Easy. 
