E. c. Vivelii. Foliage dark green in summer, purple-green in winter; 
flowers bright carmine-red. Feb. 50c. 
E. clliaris Mrs. C. H. Gill. Sombre gray-green lacy foliage; large rich 
crimson flowers. July-Oct. 50c. 
E. c. Stoborough. Foliage bright green; long spikes of large white flow¬ 
ers. July-Oct. 50c. 
E. c. Wych. A lacy bush with long spikes of delicate pink bells. July- 
Oct. 50c. 
E. cinerea. 12-18 in.; narrow bronzy foliage; long upright spikes of not- 
large rose-purple flowers; a fine “carrying” color. July-Oct. 50c. 
The following new E. cinerea varieties are spectacular in their vivid 
ruby-carmine-cerise-red colors and the shining qualities of their flow¬ 
ers. They vary a little in their habit, some prostrate, some more 
stiffly upright. Some begin to bloom in June; others last into Oct.: 
E. c. atrorubens. Somewhat viney; first to bloom in our garden. 50c. 
E. c. C. D. Eason. Spikes 3 in. long; color of great depth. 50c. 
E. c. coccinea. Early to bloom; bright color. 50c. 
E. c. Domino. 9 in. Habit lax; large slender bells of snowy-white with 
ebony sepals and stalks. 50c. 
E. c. lilacina. Branches reclining; foliage bright green; flowers clear 
lilac. Only a few plants. $1.00. 
E. c. Mrs. Dill. Small compact plant. 50c. 
E. c. splendens. Rich carmine floWers. 50c. 
E. hybrida Watsonii. Foliage dark green; large silvery-rose flowers. 50c. 
E. h. Williamsiana. A low creeping habit, the branches “wild” and 
therefore excellent to tie various groups together. Masses of small 
pink flowers. 50c. 
E. lusitanica Veitchil. Too tall for rock garden proper; bright green 
feathery foliage and masses of fragrant white flowers. Jan.-Mar. 50c. 
E. Mackaiana fl. pi. A delicate dark green carpeting ling with flowers 
so double that they resemble crisp rosy-pink fruits. 50c. 
E. vagans alba. A beautiful free-flowering form. 50c. 
E. V. Lyonesse. 9 in. Long spikes; flowers snowy-white with pale brown 
protruding anthers. Aug.-Sept. 50c. 
E. V. Mrs. D. F. Maxwell. 9 in. Branches loaded with dark-cerise flow¬ 
ers. Aug.-Sept. 50c. 
E. V. St. Keverne. 9 in. Branches filled with apple-blossom pink bells. 
One of the best. Aug.-Oct. 50c. 
Gaultheria adenothrix. Evergreen prostrate shrub; thick inch-long 
leaves, warm red in winter; flowers waxy-white urns; fruit red. $1.00. 
G. antipoda. A small upright shrub beset with thick oval finely serrate 
lustrous leaves nearly V 2 in. long; flowers white and urn-shaped. New 
Zealand. $1.00. 
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