Campanula fenestrellata. Thin green leaves. Light blue 
flowers. Open foliage. 
C. fenestrellata incisa. Cut leaved form of above. Tiny 
flowers. 4 in. Rare. $ .35. 
C. garganica. The best of all. Tight rosettes covered 
with blue bells. 5 in. 
C. istriaca. Very hardy. Large hairy leaved form of 
garganica. 
C. muralis. Next best. Small rosettes. Tubular purplish 
flowers. 
C. pusilla. Creeping type. Fine for filling tight ledges. 
Pale blue. 2 in. 
C. rotundifolia venzloi. An extremely hardy "Blue Bells 
of Scotland." 10 in. 
C. rupestris. Extremely rare. Grecian species. True and 
hardy. $1.50 each. 
Corydalis cheilanthaefolia. Golden Fumitory. 12 in. 
Yellow flowers. Fern-like leaves. Shade. 
Coreopsis auriculata. Fine dwarf. 6-8 in. Everflowering 
golden daisies. Recommended. 
Cotyledon chrysantha. Tight hairy rosettes. Like a Sem- 
pervivum from China. 
Dianthus. The Rock Pinks are indispensable. Of some 40 
tried, the following have proven best: 
D. arverrtensis. Tiny prickly blue mounds of foliage. 
Smothered in May with soft pink flowers. 
D. caesius fl. pi. Tight clumps of foliage. Double crim¬ 
son to pink flowers in May. Very fragrant. 
Dryas octopetala. Mountain Avens. A prostrate shrub 
from the highest mountain. 6 in. Large white flowers. 
