Cneoridium dumosum —Shrub, 3 ft. Small white flowers. Round red-brown 
berries. Western San Diego County. 50 cents per packet. 
Collinsia bicolor, Innocence, Chinese Houses—Annual, 15 in. White flowers 
splashed with purple or lavender. Shady hillsides. Recommended for 
naturalizing. 30 cents per ounce, $1.75 per half pound, $3.00 per pound. 
Collinsia torreyi, var. wrightii —Annual, 4 in. Flowers blue and cream. High 
montane to 8000 ft. Limited quantity. 50 cents per packet. 
Collomia grandiflora —Annual, 18 in. Clustered heads of pale salmon phlox- 
type flowers. Open wooded slopes to 8000 ft. throughout California and 
north to British Columbia. 
Convolvulus soldanella, Beach Morning-glory—Prostrate. Thick round 
shining leaves. Large beautiful pink flowers. Sand dunes. 
Cooperia drummondii, Rain Lily—12 in. Grass-like leaves. White amaryllis¬ 
shaped flowers. Blooms several times a year under cultivation. Lime and 
sun. Texas. Probably hardy. 50 cents per packet. 
Coreopsis bigelovii (leptosyne bigelovii) —Annual, 12 in. Basal tuft of 
finely dissected leaves. Large yellow flowers on single stems. Desert. 
Coreopsis gigantea (leptosyne gigantea), Tree Coreopsis—Shrub, 5 ft. 
Thick short trunk. Finely divided foliage in rounded mass, above which 
rise large yellow composite flowers. Santa Barbara Islands and adjacent 
coast. 50 cents per packet. 
Coreopsis maritima (leptosyne maritima), Sea Dahlia—2 ft. Finely 
divided leaves, mostly basal. Yellow composite flowers, 4 in. across. 
Southern California coast. Recommended for naturalizing. $1.50 per 
ounce, $7.00 per half pound, $12.00 per pound. 
Coreopsis stillmanii (leptosyne, stillmanii) —Annual, 12 in. Branching 
leafy stems, the leaves finely divided. Large yellow daisy-like flowers. 
Interior valleys. Recommended for naturalizing. $2.00 per ounce, $12.00 
per half pound, $20.00 per pound. 
Coreothrogyne californica, Woolly Aster—12 in. Prostrate or spreading. 
Silver-gray foliage. Many pink-lavender flowers. Northern California 
coast. 
Cotyledon —See Dudleya. 
Cupressus goveniana, Gowen Cypress—Dwarf evergreen tree. Compact 
rounded habit. Should be better known. Endemic to Monterey Peninsula. 
Cynoglossum grande. Western Hound’s Tongue—2 ft. Raceme of brilliant 
blue flowers. Wooded canyons of northern California to 4000 ft. 
Datura meteloides, Tolguacha—Spreading, 2 ft. Large gray leaves. White 
violet-tinged trumpet-shaped flowers, 7 in. long. Sandy valley lands to 
4000 ft. 
Delphinium cardinale, Scarlet Larkspur— 5 ft. Loose erect panicles of scar¬ 
let flowers. Hot sandy washes. 
Delphinium nudicaule, Red Larkspur—18 in. Slender branching growth. 
Red flowers. Shaly hillsides. Coast ranges and to 8000 ft. in Sierra 
Nevada mountains. Hardy. 50 cents per packet. 
Delphinium scopulorum, var. glaucum (delphinium glaucum) —5 ft. Ro¬ 
bust growth. Eighteen inch spikes closely set with blue flowers. Mountain 
stream banks and wet meadows to 9000 ft. Hardy. 
Delphinium variegatum, Royal Larkspur— 3 ft. Open branching raceme of 
large rich royal purple flowers. The best of the blue California delphin¬ 
iums. Grassy hillsides of central California coast. 50 cents per packet. 
Dendromecon rigida. Tree Poppy—Shrub, 6 ft. Willow-like foliage. Large 
yellow flowers. Continuously blooming. Dry slopes to 3000 ft. Prob¬ 
ably hardy. 
Packets Twenty-five Cents Unless Otherwise Indicated 
Ten 
