CEPHALANTHUS. OCCIDENTALIS—Button Bush 
or Honey Balls. (C) 3-12’ summer-blooming shrub 
with attractive, white, one-inch balls of sweet flowers. 
Moist places in sun or light shade. 
CHELONE GLABRA—White Turtlehead. (B) 36” 
stems terminate with oddly shaped, white flowers. 
Late Summer. Sunny or shady, wet places. 
CHIMAPHILA MACULATA—Spotted Wintergreen 
or Spotted Pipsissewa. (A) 10”. Stolons creep through 
the humus in the woods and send up stems with white- 
veined, evergreen leaves here and there. In early 
Summer, three or four attractive white blossoms rise 
above them. Desirable for woods garden. Suggest 
sowing in humus or leafmold (sterilized). Also larger 
packets at 50¢. 
CHIMAPHILA UMBELLATA—Prince’s Pine. Similar 
to above but usually more leafy. Leaves are bright, 
shiny green and not white-veined. 
CHRYSOPSIS FALCATA—Ground Gold. (B) 12” 
branching, wooly stems bear golden “asters” for 
several months in dry, acid, sandy soil. Sun. 
CHRYSOPSIS MARIANA—(B) 24” late summer- 
blooming “Golden Aster”. Sun or light shade. 
CLEMATIS VIRGINIANA—Virgin’s Bower. (A) 
A long vine that drapes over bushes and into trees, 
bearing clusters of small, white flowers scattered 
throughout, during Summer, followed by long, 
feathery, plumed seed clusters which are quite at- 
tractive. Thickets along streams. 
CLEOME LUTEA—Yellow Cleome. (B) Branching, 
annual 36” stems bear racemes of long-stamened, 
yellow “spider-flowers” in the Summer sun. Likes 
dry soil. 
CLETHRA ALNIFOLIA—Sweet Pepperbush. (B) 
72” with many spikes of white-flowered fragrance in 
late Summer when few shrubs are blooming. Wet 
places in sun or shade. 
CLINTONIA BOREALIS—Yellow Clintonia. (A) In 
Spring, the 12” stems bear loose clusters of pale 
yellow, lily-like blossoms over “Lady-slipper” type 
foliage. in Fall, the oval, blue berries are quite 
conspicuous in the woods. Wants cool, acid soil. 
COREOPSIS GRANDIFLORA—(B) 12-36” popular, 
yellow-flowered composite for sunny places. Summer 
blooming. Naturalizes easily. 
COREOPSIS TRIPTERIS—Tall Coreopsis. (B) 84” 
stems, much branched, bear many yellow-rayed flowers 
in late Summer. Moist woods and thickets. 
CORYDALIS SEMPERVIRENS — (B) 24” ever- 
blooming annual. Many dainty, pink flowers with 
yellow tips, rise above delightful, deeply cut foliage. 
Sun or shade. Will naturalize. 
DASYSTOMA PEDICULARIA—Fern-leaved Fox- 
glove. 48” annual. The showy, large, golden flowers. 
that appear in late Summer, cut well. Sun or light 
shade near Oak trees. Parasitic on the Oak roots. 
Also larger packets at 50¢. 
DECODON VERTICILLATUS—Swamp Loosestrife. 
(B). 60” arching stems which take root where they 
touch. Beautiful, pink-purple flowers in interrupted 
whorls around the stem make this a highly desirable 
wildling. For the bog garden. Blooms in late Summer. 
