January 1,1936 • 
d^arf EVERGREENS 
Upright 8c Trailing Excellent for Rock Cardens. 
Permanent beauty in the rock garden throughout the 
four seasons can he attained ty making free use of appropriate 
dwarf evergreens, which have teen selected for this list. The 
plants are, for the most part, easy to grow and need practically 
no care except thorough watering after transplanting and in ary 
weather, so genuinely satisfactory are these evergreens that 
many persons have planted their entire rock gardens with them. 
Naturally many of these varieties are very good planted in other 
situations than the rock garden, especially foundation plantings, 
because they remain dwarf. 
Dwarf Hinoki Cypress 
Chamaecyparis ottusa nana. Low, slow growing plant with short, 
dark green foliage. Very picturesque.8-10” -*2.50 ea. 
Purple Winteroreeper 
Euonymus radicans colorstus. Evergreen foliage very effective 
in winter; leaves purple below, tinged purple 
above, strong potgrown. v .50 each; $3.50 for 10. 
Ivies 
Hedera helix arborescens. Tree Ivy. Very ornamental; produces 
an abundance of vari-colored berries, 
potgrown, 18” - $.75 each; $6.00 for 10. 
H. helix baltica. Faltic Ivy. Hardy, small-leaved form of 
■English Ivy. strong, potgrown. $.60 each;$5.00 -10. 
H. helix coreacaea. Leatherleaf Ivy. A very rare hardy variety 
with leathery, oddly shaped foliage. 
Strong, potgrown, $.70 each; $5.00 for 10. 
H. helix discolor (marmorata). Strong potgrown, $.75 ea.$5.50 -10. 
H. helix gracilis. Small-leaf English Ivy. strong potgrown, 
$.70 each; $5.00 for 10. 
The Junipers 
Juniperus chinensis japonica. Japanese Juniper. Ascending, 
spreading branches. little known; worth a good 
place. 15-18” $1.50 each. 
