%HODODENDRONS 
^ the most ^, 
showy flowering plants. They are attractive at all 
seasons; in flower they are magnificent, in foliage they 
excel any evergreen. Those who have seen our fields, 
in bloom know something of their brilliant display. 
Our plants have been growing several years in our • 
Nursery, and have a system of roots five times the bulk of 
newly imported plants. They are varieties of established 
hardiness. They embrace the clearest colors. Decaying leaves 
form their principal requirement. Apply eight inches over the 
entire bed annually. Beds made up from varieties indicated 
the same letter will harmonize in color. 
Rhododendrons 
North of the House 
cA, b, c, c/.— Album Elegans. Tall, pinkish white. 
2 ft. high ^1.50 each, ^12.50 per ten ; 3 ft. high 
^4.50 each, ^40.00 per ten. 
a — Lady Armstrong. Best pink, large, vigorous. 
d — Everestianum. Lilac, frilled flowers, medi- 
um grower. iV^ ft. high ^1.35 each, ^12.00 
per ten; 2 ft. high ^2.00 each, ^17.50 per ten. 
-They quickly cover 
buildings, fences, walls, 
banks, trellises pergolas, stumps, bare 
ground, and make a pleasing tangle 
anywhere. 
Clematis Paniculata— The small-flowered sweet- 
scented one. Blooms in September. 30c. each, 
^2.50 per 10, ^20.00 per 100. 
b, c — Delicatissima. 
late. 
White, tinged pink, 
d — Boulede Neige. Pure white, low grow- 
a, b, c 
ing. 
b, c — Charles Dickens. The standard crimson. 
d — Parsons Grandiflorum. Most floriferous, red, 
tinged with lilac, tall, i ft. high ^1.25 each, 
^11.00 per ten; i34 ft. high ^2.00 each, ^17.50 
per ten; 2 ft. high ^3.00 each, ^25.00 per 
ten. 
Euonymus Radicdns—Phnt this hardy evergreen 
vine at your foundation, or in your Rhododen- 
dron beds. 8-12 in. 25c. each, ^2.00 per 10, 
^15.00 per 100. 
Broad-Leaved Form Euonymus Radicans, var. 
Vegetis — 6- 12 in. high 25c. each, ^2.00 per 10, 
^15.00 per 100. 
PACHYSANDRA TERMINALIS (Japan- 
ese Spurge). — This makes a bright green carpet 
all Winter. Try 500 under your shrubbery. It 
grows about 6 inches high. It is easy to grow and 
asks only partial shade. It will make a pretty 
patch in the woods, at the house foundation, and 
can be used very largely as an under-planting for 
shrubs, making the ground always neat and attrac- 
tive. To calculate how many you can use, estimate 
planting it one foot apart. 4-6 in. high ^1.50 
per ten, ^10.00 per hundred. 
Honeysuckle, Japanese.— Gteen leaves all Win- 
ter. Plant 2 to 3 ft. apart. Certainly you can 
use a hundred or more, i - 2 ft. high 25c. each, 
^2.00 per 10, ^15.00 per 100. 
I'Vy, Japanese or Boston— The deservedly popu- 
lar wall vine. I ft. high 20c. each, $1.80 per 
10, ^15.00 per 100. 
