Rosa gymnocarpa, Redwood Rose— 4 ft. Slender growth. Intense rose-pink 
flowers. Deep redwood forests. 
Rydbergia grandiflora —Alpine, 8 in. White-woolly plant'. Large many-rayed 
yellow composite flowers. Rocky Mountains, 9000 to 12,000 ft. Hardy. 
Salvia columbariae, Chia—Annual, 12 in. Whorls of intense blue flowers. 
Dry hillsides. 
Salvia spathacea (audibertia grandiflora), Humming-bird Sage— 2 ft. 
Heavy foliage. Whorls of crimson flowers. Southern Coast Ranges. 
Sambucus racemosa, Red Elderberry—Spreading shrub, 4 ft. Broad clusters 
of brilliant scarlet berries. High montane beside surface streams to 10,000 
ft. Hardy. 
Sedum spathulifolium —Matted growth. Rosettes of gray-green leaves. 
Cymes of yellow flowers on four-inch stems. Foothill rocks to 5000 ft. and 
north to British Columbia. Hardy. 
Sedum yosemitense —Rosettes of broadly spatulate green to reddish leaves. 
Flat-topped cymes of orange flowers on 4 in. stems. Sierra Nevada Moun¬ 
tains to 7000 ft. Hardy. 
Silene grandis— 12 in. Leafy stems bearing whorls of pink flowers. Seacoast 
of northern California. 
Silene hookeri— 4 in. Gray basal leaves. Broad pink flowers with deeply 
fringed petals. Foothills of northern Coast Ranges to western Oregon 
50 cents per packet. 
Sisyrinchium bellum, Blue-eyed Grass—Iris family, 9 in. Bright purple- 
blue flowers, yellow center. Grassy slopes. Hardy. 
Sisyrinchium californicum, Golden-eyed Grass—Iris family, 12 in. Bright 
yellow flowers. Occasional in wet places throughout California. 
Solanum wallacei, Catalina Nightshade—Bush, 3 ft. Purple-blue flowers 2 
in. across. Collected on Catalina Island. 
Sphaeralcea coccinea (malvastrum coccineum) —Decumbent, 18 in. Cop¬ 
per-scarlet flowers. High desert mesas to 6000 ft. Hardy. 
Sphaeralcea parryi (malvastrum parryi) —Annual, 8 in. Gray, densely 
hairy foliage. Soft rose-pink flowers. Dry central interior valleys. Lim¬ 
ited quantity. 
Sphaeralcea rotundifolia (malvastrum rotundifolium ),Five-spot—An¬ 
nual, 15 in. Round hairy leaves. Handsome globe-shaped pale lilac 
flowers with carmine spot at the base of each petal. Desert. Limited 
quantity. 
Swertia parryi (frasera parryi) —2 ft. Basal rosette of beautiful silver- 
margined leaves, narrow and crinkly. Single stem bearing panicle of 
white, black-dotted flowers. Southern California to 5500 ft. Probably 
hardy. 
Swertia radiata (frasera speciosa), Deer’s Tongue, Green Gentian— 4 ft. 
Erect basal rosette of 8 in. leaves, gray-green, soft and downy. Single 
stout stem bearing long panicle of white fringe-filled, purple-dotted flowers. 
High montane in open pine woods to 9000 ft. Hardy. 
Synthris rotundifolia—4 in. Beautifully marked rounded leaves on slender 
basal stems. Panicles of light blue flowers. North Coast Ranges and 
north to Oregon. Hardy. 50 cents per packet. 
Packets Twenty-five Cents Unless Otherwise Indicated 
T wenty-T wo 
