*G. procumbens. Wintergreen; dark leathery oblong leaves at the ends 
of 6 inch stoloniferous branches; flowers pinkish waxy bells; fruit 
persistent. 50c. 
♦Kalmla microphylla. 8 inch; evergreen, narrow shiny leaves with rose 
saucer-shaped flowers. May. 50c. 
♦Ledum groenlandicum. 12 inch to several feet; evergreen narrow puck¬ 
ered leaves with a felt of rusty hairs beneath. Rounded clusters of 
white flowers in June. 50c. 
♦Leiophyllum buxifolium prostratum. 4-8 inch; small bush of character; 
evergreen shiny round leaves; very free blooming; globular cinnabar- 
red buds open into starry white flowers. Mar. $1.50. 
♦Loiseluria (Azalea) procumbens. Arctic alpine; twiggy bushes of few 
inches; very small leaves and small bright pink bells. $1.00. 
♦Leucothoe racemosum. 18 inch; shrubby; oval leaves turn beautiful 
crimson in fall; creamy angular bells. 75c. 
♦Phyllodoce coerulea. 6 inch; a sparsely branched arctic-alpine; blue- 
violet urn-shaped flowers in spring. $1.00. 
♦Pieris floribunda. 2-3 foot; branching from the base; evergreen leaves 
oblong; branches terminated by great upright pannicles of lily-of-the- 
valley flowers. $1.00. 
Rhododendron. There is great variation in the height to which rhodo¬ 
dendrons will grow. If planted in the open to take the brunt of wind 
and weather, they remain comparatively low and dwarf in form. 
However, a savage sun is too much; somewhat diffused light is much 
better. Cool acid soil with an annual mulch of pulverized sphagnum 
and moisture during the growing season insure good health. 
Rhododendron brachyanthum. Dwarf; sparsely branched; oblong leaves 
1% inches long; 3-4 flowered umbels of lovely greenish-yellow bells. 
75c. 
R. calostrotum. A small twiggy bush with greenish gray leaves and large 
silky-textured crimson flowers, 2 inches across. $1.50. 
*R. (Therorodion) camtschaticum. 12 inch; deciduous rusty branched 
stoloniferous shrub; rose-violet, saucer-shaped flowers 1^ inches 
across. May. $1.50. 
(We have a rhododendron, unknown to us, that somewhat resembles 
the above; it seems to be more easily transplanted; the plants are 
much older and larger than our R. camtschaticum. May. $3.00.) 
R. ciliatum. 18 inch and over; evergreen leaves large and hairy; flowers 
wide funnels of apple blossom pink; very floriferous; Mar. $2.00. 
R. daphnoides. 2-3 foot; hybrid of R. ferrugineum and R. minus; shiny 
pointed leaves; large rose-red flowers; June and July. For quick sale. 
75c. 
R. elaeagnoides. 9 inch; numerous warty branches; oval scurfy leaves; 
flowers solitary, nodding bright yellow or reddish purple. $1.00. 
R. fastigiatum. 8-15 inch; a small grayish leaved aromatic bush; reddish 
heliotrope flowers. Early spring and fall. 75c. 
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