30 
CARL STARKER, JENNINGS LODGE, OREGON 
MISCELLANEOUS GROUP. 
Cartilaginea. Stiff rosettes of leaves with pinkish flowers. 50c. 
Decipiens Guilford’s Hybrids. Lovely shades of white, pink or rose 
flowers. Forms a soft evergreen carpet. 
Decipiens H. S. Stokes. Fine mossy variety with bright carmine flowers. 
Peltata. Moisture loving with immense leaves on 2-3 ft. stems. Wide 
heads of fine pink flowers. 50c. 
Umbrosa Primuloides. Dwarf London Pride. Compact and fine with 
pink flowers. 8 in. 35c. 
Umbrosa Primuloides Elliott's variety. Very dwarf. Especially good 
pink flowers. 3-4 in. 50c. 
SC A BJO-S A Graminifolia. Silvery leaves. Pale blue flowers. 35c. 
SOIL LA. Lovely spring-flowering bulbs with small hyacinth-like blooms. 
Campanulata. Blue or white. 5c each. 
Campanulata Rosea. A soft lilac rose form of Campanulata. 75c per doz. 
Peruviana. Fine wide spikes of brilliant blue flowers. Very showy and 
fine. 25c each. 
Siberica. Blue. Very early. Drooping bell-like flowers on 3-4 in. stems. 
Lovely for the rock garden. 75c per doz. 
SCUTELLARIA Alpina. Spreading mats with lavender flowers. 
Indica Japonica. Attractive velvety gray foliage and lavender blue flow¬ 
ers through late summer and fall. 35c. 
SEDUM. Easy sun-loving plants with fleshy leaves. Good for walls and 
stepping stones. 
Arboreum. A bushy sort with light pink flowers. 6-8 in. 
Cape Blanco. A particularly choice form of Spathulifolium with tight 
gray rosettes and yellow flowers. Oregon native. 
Dasyphyllum. Glaucous bead-like foliage. Pink flowers. 
Ewersii. Gray blue shrubby foliage. Rose colored blossoms. 
Kamschaticum. Trailing. Bright orange flowers. 
Kamschaticum Variegatum. Variegated form of the above. 
Miiddendorffianum. Low tufts of narrow reddish brown leaves. Yellow 
flowers. 4 in. 
Obtusatum. Fat bronzy leaves. Golden flowers. Western native. 
Oreganum. Fat paddle-shaped leaves turning bronzy in the fall. Oregon 
native. 
Purdyii. Flat rosettes of leaves resembling sempervivums. Choice and 
different. 35c. 
Sieboldii. Red edged glaucous leaves. Heads of pink flowers in Sep¬ 
tember. 
Spathulifolium. Glaucous foliage. Yellow flowers. Fine. 
Stahlii. Dwarf yellow flowered sort. Foliage tinged red in mid-summer. 
SEMPERVIVUM. Hen and Chickens. Succulent plants of easiest culture. 
Good in poor soil and sunny places. Color and texture of foliage 
differs widely in different species. The nomenclature of this class of 
