P. nitidus Three weeks earlier than angustifolius, 
lower, deeper blue, and indispensable. 30c; 3, 75c. 
P. secundiflorus Broad-throated, showy, dark rosy 
lavender with gray green; 15”; July. 35c; 3, 90c. 
Petalostemon purpureus Purple Prairie Clover. 
Circlets of orange-dotted purple red, on deep green 
cones, June, July; 15”. Scree or sand. 35c: 3, 85c. 
P. villosus Velvet Prairie Clover. Plump cones of 
soft silvery rose and silvery green, lovely and dec- 
orative; July-Sept. 12”. Same culture. 40c; 3, $1. 
Phlox alyssifolia Bounty of soft lavender pink, 
inch wide fragrant blossoms for your delight. 3 to 
5”; May, June; leaves lanceolate, edged white. Slow 
mat former, adaptable to most any soil if well 
drained, luxuriates in scree with a little richness. 
Give half shade first summer. 30c; 3, 80c. 
P. andicola Large white blossomed creeping Phlox 
of the high prairies, blooming from April through 
June; 4’. Same culture, this and the following 
Phloxes as for alyssifolia. 20c; 3, 55c; doz. $2.00. 
P. andicola new, blue lavender, choice, 35c; 3, 75c. 
P. andicola new, lovely powder blue. 50c. 
P. andicola extra large white; select. 45c; 3, $1.10. 
P. hoodi Mossy green, snowed over with lovely lit- 
tle blossoms, April, May. Slow spreading, finally 
making wide mats. 30c; 3, 75c; doz. $2.80. 
P. longifolia Handsome upright species, to 6’; clus- 
ter flowered, producing wide masses of mauve pink, 
in May; leaves dark green. 50c; 3, $1.25. 
P. scleranthifolia Free flowering white, thrilling 
in its wide dense mats or trailing down over rocks; 
May. Permanent light shade. Pronagated from fin- 
est selected forms. New. 50c; 3, $1.35. 
Phlox “Little Cheyenne.” Most perfect little blos- 
soms imaginable, shining white with the usual speck 
of gold at center; May. Intermediate between hoodi 
and andicola, species undetermined. Each 75c. 
Potentilla divisa Astonishing beauty in sunlit yel- 
low from a tuft of silvered leaves; early May. 
Height 3”, spread to 10”. 50c; 3, $1.35. 
Senecio purshianus Plant of nice habit, disvlaying 
in June airy light gold blossoms, 8 or 9” up from a 
permanently gray leaf mass. 35c; 3, 75c. ; 
Sideranthus spinulosus Massed light golden inch- 
wide Asters, September, October. Dense low type, 
height 6”; fine textured frosty foliage. 30c; 3, 75c. 
Solidago mollis Most attractive Goldenrod bearing 
roundish heads up to 12”; Sept. Slow traveler. 25c. 
S. pulcherrima (corrected from “trinervata.’’) 
September beauty with plump tapering rods, to 16”, 
and the happy faculty of not traveling. 35c. 
Talinum parviflorum Little Sunbright. Airy rosy 
blossoms every summer afternoon, to 7’, from a 2” 
tuft of succulent leaves. Tiny tubers, 3, 35c. 
Thalictrum venulosum Especially good faintly blu- 
ish foliage masses, to 8’, for all season effect. 
Bronzy bloom, to 15 or 18’. 35c; 3, 70c. 
Thermopsis rhombifolia Dwarf Golden Pea. Broad 
packed racemes of glowing yellow, May; 8 to 12”. 
Unusual and beautiful. Slow colonizer. 35c; 6, 65c. 
Townsendia exscapa Easter Daisy. Tuffet of nar- 
row silvery evergreen leaves, incredibly wide glow- 
ing pink Daisies, all under 2” of height; April, May. 
For dryest leanest scree. 35c; 3, 85c. 
