‘Harlequin’ 
‘Haslemere Scarlet’ 
‘Heathermead’ 
‘Heinrich Bruns’ 
‘Henderson’ 
30 
(Grandview Nursery, Youngsville, Louisiana. Catalog, p. 3. 1957-58) : 
Slow growing; leaves white variegated. Letter November 30, 1961, Earl E. 
Vallot, Grandview Nursery : Variegated clone obtained from Mitsch Nurs- 
ery, Aurora, Oregon; renamed by Grandview Nursery. 
= ‘Variegated’, ‘Dwarf, ‘Tricolor’, ‘Vancouver Variegated’, ‘Variegata’ 
(Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society 75(4):lix. 1950, as P. 
atalantioides ‘Haslemere Scarlet’, without description) : Exhibited at 
Royal Horticultural Society show, February 14, 1950, by Mrs. E. Pawsey, 
Weyhill, Haslemere, England. Letter June 12, 1967, Mrs. Michael 
Haworth-Booth, Farall Nursery, Roundhurst, Surrey, England : Seedling 
‘Haslemere Scarlet’ noticeably brighter, more evergreen, and more 
densely free fruiting than those of most P. atalantioides. 
P. atalantioides 
(Frederick Street, Woking, Surrey, England. Catalog, p. 33. 1949, as P. 
crenulata ‘Heathermead’ variety) : Fruit scarlet. 
P. crenulata 
(Herm. A. Hesse, Weener, Germany. Catalog, p. 180. 1961-62, as P. 
coccinea ‘Andenken an Heinrich Bruns’) : Fruit exceptionally brilliant and 
abundant. Ibid., p. 181. 1966-67 : Fruit brilliant red, persistent, hardly 
touched by birds. Ibid., p. 101. 1967-68 : Fruit orange red; disease resis- 
tant; two color variations, red and orange, are cultivated. Selected by 
Heinrich Bruns Nursery, Westerstede, Oldenburg, Germany. Introduced 
by Herm. A. Hesse in 1961. 
= ‘Andenken an Heinrich Bruns’ 
P. coccinea 
(Verhalen Nursery, Scottsville, Texas. Catalog, p. 16. 1949-50) : Ever- 
green; leaves glossy; fruit red, large, huge clusters. 
