summer and fall. All listed are more or less 
hairy, grayish, prolific bloomers. The 10 to 
12 inch stems of this one lie upon the ground, 
turning up at the tips to 5 inches or so. 20c; 
3, 50c. 
C. —A leafy, bushy plant to 8 or 
10 inches; spread, 12 to 20 inches. Fine 
flowers , Sept.-Oct. 30c; 3, 75c 
C. villosa—Numerous slender stems, with 
velvety leaves, in a mound to 10 inches (high, 
20 inches across. Handsome flowers from 
early August into September. 35c; 3, 85c. 
COGSWELLIA villosa (Lomatium foenicu- 
laceum)—Wild Celery, or Parsley. Gray 
downy, fern-like leaves that lie flat in late 
March, later rise to 6 inches. Fuzzy umbels 
of yellow in April and May. Disappears by 
summer. 15c, 3, 40c. 
DODECATHEON pauciflorum—This dwarf 
Shooting Star will perhaps bear more drought 
than any other. Charming bright rose and 
gold galaxies, May, June, Established plants 
send up many blossom stems, seldom to 
more than 8 inches. Dormant crowns, fall 
only, 25c; doz., $2.50. 
ECHINACEA angustifolia—Great pink dai¬ 
sies, centers prickly comes of polished ma¬ 
hogany. Foliage mostly basal, to 6 inches, 
the flowering stems rising 10 to 14 inches. 
June, July. 30c; 3, 75c. 
ERIGERDN canus—From the dry, open 
places. Little narrow, grayish, leaves, sev¬ 
eral ascending stems, to 8 inches, each bear¬ 
ing one or two little white flowers, gold 
centered. June. 20c; 3, 50c. 
E. flagellaris—A new thing in small white 
daisies, spreading freely by rooting at the 
tips of lateral branches. It is a light, elfin 
thing, the flowers borne singly, 3 to 6 inches 
above small basal rosettes. I do not yet 
know its full behavior. Its high season is 
perhaps July, but it has flowered for me 
every month from June to October. Try it 
as a dainty ground cover in good soil, sun 
or shade. 35c; doz. $2.50. 
E. glabellus—From shady or moister places 
in the Black Hills. 4 to 10 inches tall.-Crowd¬ 
ed, oblanceolate basal leaves a rich green, 
scapes ascending, carrying one or two 
flowers, with very many crowded narrow 
rays, white or more often purple tinged. 
July, Aug. Evergreen. 20c; clumps 40c. 
ERIOGONUM flavum (crassifolium)—Long- 
oval leaves, gray-green velvet above, white 
velvet beneath, in close rosettes or, in old 
plants, in mats as much as 10 inches wide; 
with many rounded umbels of soft yellow, 
fuzzy with long stamens, on 4 to 8 inch 
scapes. Very distinct. Native to crevicesi or 
among limestone chips. 50c; 3, $1.35. 
GEOPRUMNON (Astragalus) crassicarpum 
-—Buffalo Pea. Broad racemes of closely 
packed pea blossoms in May, their tones 
soft but rich, purple, pink and buff blended. 
The prostrate stems with good pinnate foliage 
are interspersed in late summer and fall 
