G. horrida. A silvery dome of thorny branches; an interesting accent 
plant; not free of bloom in our garden. 75c. 
G. humifusa. A ground covering broom with small dark green shiny 
leaves and yellow flowers. 75c. 
G. pilosa. Prostrate; a very slow-growing little shrub. Small yellow 
flowers. 75c. 
G. Villarsii. A densely branched gray-green decumbent shrub of very 
slow growth; flowers clear gold. 75c. 
Trifolium uniflorum. Turkey. Absolutely prostrate; blue-green leaves; 
large clear rosy-pink flowers borne singly; produced over a long 
season, $1.00. 
LINACEAE 
Linum arboreum. 18 in. Rounded evergreen bush with blue-green leaves; 
clusters of large clear yellow flowers from May till Sept. 75c. 
LILIACEAE 
Tofieldia fusca. Came to us as a Japanese stow-away among other plants. 
After many years it has grown large enough to share. Foliage in 
wings like a 3-in. iris; a very alpine-looking tuft. Flowers small, 
purple-brown. 75c. 
OLEACEAE 
Jasminum Parkeri. 6 in. Himalaya; a wiry branched shrub with beauti- 
ful divided leaves and large tubular flowers. 25c. 
Ligustrum coriaceum. A compact slow-growing shrub, crowded with 
dark green glossy leaves round and curving. Rather nice as an accent. 
Small plants 50c. 
OXALIDACEAE 
Oxalis adenophora. 4 in. Tufts of beautiful blue-green crowded divided 
leaves and large clean pinkish flowers, the center conspicuously 
splotched with purple crimson. For the best development the bulblets 
that crowd the parent bulb should be removed every two years from 
out the fibrous covering and replanted. One bulb. 50c. 
O. enneaphylla rosea. From the Falkland Islands. A mass of gray-blue 
foliage, each leaf divided into 9 leaflets and these folded upward; 
beautiful large rosy flowers. $1.00. 
* O. oregana. A native of the Pacific Coast woodland. White or pinkish 
flowers. 25c. 
ea, gd 
