Heuchera rubescens, var. pringlei —10 in. Mats of glistening rounded leaves. 
Red-stemmed feathery panicles of white flowers. Rocky ledges of Sierra 
Nevada mountains to 10,000 ft. Hardy. 
Hugelia virgata —Annual, 10 in. Clusters of deep blue, yellow-throated, fun¬ 
nel-form flowers. Hillslopes near coast of southern California. 
Hulsea nana —Alpine, 5 in. Woolly stems and leaves. Large yellow composite 
flowers. Sandy volcanic mountain peaks to 11,000 ft. Hardy. 50 cents 
per packet. 
Iris bracteata— 12 in. Yellow flowers veined with red-brown. Redwood belt 
and mountains of northern California. Probably hardy. 50 cents per 
packet. 
I. CHRYSOPHYLLA —Dwarf. Slender. White or yellow flowers. Free blooming. 
Mountains of western Oregon. Probably hardy. 50 cents per packet. 
I. douglasiana, Mountain Iris—18 in. Large flowers. Coastal species pur¬ 
ple, mountain varieties varying in color to lilac and cream. Redwood 
belt and mountains of northern California. Hardy. 
I. longipetala, Coast Iris—15 in. Large white and violet flowers. Heavy 
wet soil along central California coast. 50 cents per packet. 
I. macrosiphon, Ground Iris—10 in. Flowers straw-yellow and violet, veined 
or mottled. Brushy coastal slopes to 3000 ft. 50 cents per packet. 
I. MISSOURIENSIS, Western Blue Flag—18 in. Flowers white to pale blue veined 
with purple. High montane in moist meadows. Widely distributed. 
Hardy. 
I. setosa —2 ft. Red-purple flower. Northwest America to Arctic regions. 
Hardy. 
I. TENAX —10 in. Flowers varying from cream-white with violet markings 
to lavender, blue and purple. Forms large clumps bearing simultaneously 
many flowers of different shades. River-valleys of western Oregon. 50 
cents per packet. 
Larrea tridentata, var. glutinosa, Creosote Bush—Evergreen shrub, 5 ft. 
Small dark green cleft leaves. Yellow flowers. Decorative fuzzy silver- 
gray seed-pods. Characteristic desert shrub of the Southwest. 
Lathyrus splendens, Pride of California—Climbing pea, 7 ft. Many-flowered 
racemes of large showy crimson flowers. Mountains of southern Cali¬ 
fornia. 
Lavatera assurgentiflora, Tree Mallow, Mission Mallow—Evergreen shrub, 
9 ft. Maple-like leaves. Large deep rose-red flowers. Indigenous to Santa 
Barbara Islands. 
Layia elegans —Annual, 9 in. Yellow daisy, rarely white-tipped. Plains and 
foothills. 
Layia glandulosa —Annual, 15 in. Glistening white broad-petaled daisy. 
Plains and foothills. 
Layia platyglossa, Tidy-tips—Annual, 12 in. Yellow daisy with broad white- 
tipped rays. Valleys and foothills to 4600 ft. Recommended for natur¬ 
alizing. $1.00 per ounce. 
Leptodactylon —See gilia, 
Leptosyne —See coreopsis. 
Packets Tiventy-five Cents Unless Otherwise Indicated 
Fifteen 
