DESIRABLE SHRUBS 
23 
Lonicera conjugialis—4 ft. Dark purple flowers. Translucent scarlet berries 
joined in pairs. High montane to 9500 ft. Hardy. 
Purshia tridentata, Antelope Brush—2 ft. Intricately and densely branched. 
Small three'deft leaves. Abundant cream-yellow flowers like small wild 
roses. Montane on arid slopes and ridges to 9000 ft. Hardy. 
Rhus integrifolia —Desirable evergreen, 6 ft. Large leathery leaves. Thick 
clusters of pink'white flowers. Coastal southern California. 
R. ovata —Evergreen, 6 ft. Shining leathery leaves. Flattened red berry. Dry 
hills of southern California. 
Ribes leptanthum var. lasianthum —2 ft. Intricately branched. Many pendent 
yellow flowers. Scarlet berries. Climbs over boulders in Sierra Nevada 
Mts. to 10,000 ft. Hardy. 
R. malvaceum— 4 ft. Early blooming. Racemes of rose'red flowers. Gray'blue 
berries. Dry hillsides of central and southern California. 
R. sanguineum var. glutinosum, Flowering Currant— 5 ft. Fragrant foliage. 
Drooping clusters of rose'pink flowers. Blue-black berries. Near coast of 
northern California. 
R. speciosum, Fuchsia'flowered Gooseberry—Evergreen, 5 ft. Glossy foliage. 
Pendent cardinahred flowers and berries. Near coast of central and south' 
ern California. 
Romneya coulteri, Matilija Poppy—Evergreen, 4 ft. Silver-gray foliage. Enor' 
mous white flowers. Dry sunny washes and canons. Hardy with care. 
Rosa gymnocarpa, Redwood Rose— 4 ft. Slender. Small intense rose'pink 
flowers. Deep redwood forests. 
Spiraea densiflora —2 ft. Dense panicles of rose flowers. Stream banks and 
granite crevices of Pacific Coast mts. to 9000 ft. Hardy. 
Styrax officinalis, Storax, Snowdrop Bush—5 ft. Smooth rounded leaves. 
Drooping clusters of large waxy-white bells. Foothill slopes of central and 
southern California. Hardy with care. 
NATIVE BULBS 
Packets 25 cents each unless otherwise indicated 
* . i 
Allium acuminatum —8 in. Umbel of many deep rose flowers. Dry interior 
northern hills. Hardy. 
A. ccrnuum—12 in. Nodding clusters of white or rose flowers. Rocky Mts. 
Hardy. 
♦ 
A. dichlamydeum —8 in. Densely crowded bunches of bright rose'pink flowers. 
Endemic to central California coast. 
A. douglasii—12 in. Round heads of deep pink flowers. Hillsides of Pacific 
Northwest. Hardy. 
