C. r. a. alba. White form. 50c. 
C. Saxifraga. A small bush of narrow brittle leaves with large violet 
bells. 50c. 
C. Stansfieldii. Sparse hairy foliage; violet bells on 4-inch stems. 50c. 
C. turbinata. Small hairy plant with blue bells. 25c. 
Codonopsis ovata. Trailing; best in sun, falling over rocks and banks; 
slate-blue flowers veined and spotted with white and yellow. 50c. 
Phyteuma hemispherica. Tufts of grassy leaves and globular heads of 
dark blue; June and July. 50c. 
P. Scheuchzeri. Pointed heart-shaped leaves on long petioles; rounded 
heads of purple-blue. 25c. 
CARYOPHYLLACEAE 
The members of the chick-weed family are for the most part sun 
lovers, wanting well drained situations. Mostly not conspicuous but 
with a daintiness of their own. 
Arenaria purpurascens. A creeping plant with small purple flowers for 
damp situations. 35c. 
*A. verna. Mossy hummocks of bright green with dainty white flowers. 
50c. 
A. verna aurea. Similar to above with pale gold foliage. Attractive used 
instead of moss among rocks. 35c. 
Dianthus caesius arvernensis. Beautiful compact mats of fat blue-gray 
foliage with pink flowers, 25c. 
D. Microlepis. Tight gray hummocks of short narrow leaves and clear 
carmine flowers. A beautiful tiny moraine plant. 50c. 
Gypsophila cerastioides. Little mounds of hairy leaves on which sit large 
white flowers veined in dusky purple. 35c. 
G. fratensis. Tufts of thick narrow blue-green leaves spangled with rosy- 
pink flowers. 40c. 
G. repens rosea. Similar to above but forming wide curtains of foliage and 
flowers. 25c. 
Melandryum (Silene) Eiizabethae. Rosettes of smooth pointed leaves. 
Farrer calls it a “jewel to be sought afar.” Our enthusiasm does not 
extend to this point, 50c. 
♦Silene acaulis. Moss campion; tight cushions of emerald green spattered 
with bright pink flowers. 25c. 
S. a. carminea. Similar with carmine flowers. 35c. 
*S. a. from Kodiak Island. With larger flesh-pink flowers; said to be more 
free-blooming. 50c. 
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