GLOBULARIA BELLIDIFOLIA: Spreading mats or 
tiny, evergreen leaves. Blue globes in spring. 
Excellent ground cover in rockery. 2 inches. 
GLOBULARIA NANA: Smaller yet. 35 cents. 
HELIOPSIS SCABRA VITELLINA: Double, orange- 
yellow flowers, large and full, from June until win- 
ter makes this an outstanding new border and cut 
flower. 2 feet. 30 cents. 
HIERACEUM BOMBYCINUM: Tiny tufts of silky 
silver; golden flowers in summer. Does not spread. 
IBERIS SAXATILIS: Tiniest of candytufts. Pure 
white flowers in spring and fall. 2 inches. 35 cents. 
INULA HELENIUM: Special selection getting to 6 
feet in height, with great golden suns in July. 
40 cents. 
LIATRIS SCARIOSA ALBA: The much-desired 
pure white form of the Blazing Star. Guaranteed. 
LYCHNIS VISCARIA fl. pl.: Red-purple double 
flowers, May and June. 12 inches. Splendid cutter. 
MICROMERIA CROATICA ALBA: 8-inch shrublet 
with small white flowers all summer. 
PENTSTEMON HYBRIDS: Subglaber x. Johnsonii. 
Large showy trumpets on 3-foot stems, near-white 
through pinks to blue. 40 cents. 
PENTSTEMON WATSONII: Unique maroon flowers 
on 12-inch stems in spring. Unusual and good. 
PHACELIA SERICEA: Deep blue flowers over sil- 
ver tufts in June. 6 inches. 
PHLOX SUBULATA: Rapid spreaders play havoc 
in choice company; on the other hand restrained 
growers are among the rock gardener’s best friends. 
Here are two of the latter. 
SCHNEEWITTCHEN: Gray-white flowers over 
low mounds. 
LEUCHSTERN: Salmon-pink flowers on _ tiny 
bushes. 
POTENTILLA FRUTICOSA PURDOMII: 2-foot 
shrublets carry single yellow ‘‘roses’’ all summer. 
Rare and beautiful. 
