20 
CARL STARKER, JENNINGS LODGE, OREGON 
GORMAN IA Laxa. Sedum-like foliage rosettes and pink flowers. 
Watsoni. Foliage more silvery than laxa. Flowers yellow. 
GYPSOPHILA. Baby Breath. Attractive, low, much-branched plants with 
clouds of tiny, airy flowers. 
Repens. Blue-gray mats of foliage covered in May and June with 
countless lovely white stars. 
Repens Rosea. Dainty rose-colored form of the above. 
Repens Bodgersi. New dwarf with semi-double flowers. 12 in. 35c. 
Rosy Veil. Very double, clear rose-pink flowers freely produced. 12 in. 
35-50C. 
HABENARIA Fimbriataw Sh. A lovely terrestrial orchid. Fourteen-inch 
flower spikes studded with dainty fringed blossoms of exquisite 
lavender pink. Rare. 50c. 
HABER LEA. Closely resembles Ramondia, but with gloxinia-like blos¬ 
soms. Likes a cool, moist crevice in the rocks. Choice and rare. 
Rhodopensis. Thick, crinkled leaves and fine lavender flowers speckled 
with gold. 75c-$l,25. 
Rhodopensis Ferdinandl-Coburgl. A finer, ampler form of the above. 
Very choice. 75c-$1.50. 
HEATHER 
I 
The dwarf heathers which are such good shrubs for the rockery are 
listed Tinder so many scientific names that it is difficult for the ordinary 
gardener to keep track of them all; therefore we have sought to simplify 
matters by listing them all under one heading. There are no finer 
rock garden subjects than the heathers; their foliage is always neat, and 
the fact that the different sorts bloom at different seasons makes it 
possible to have one or another of them in bloom at almost any time 
of year. All heathers require a loose, peaty soil, and will be improved 
if they are cut back after flowering, as this tends to make them more 
compact. 
CALLUNA. Low. evergreen shrubs with bright flowers in long, rather 
dense racemes which appear in great profusion in late summer. The 
leaves are small and scale-like and are arranged in 4’s, so that the 
small branches have a four-angled appearance. 
Vulgaris Alba Var. Hammondii. Dense spikes of purest white flowers. 
Fine bright green foliage unchanged by winter weather. 10-12 in. 
50-75C. 
Vulgaris Aurea. Rich golden bronze foliage in winter. Lavender 
blooms. 25-50C. 
Vulgaris Camla. A very fine form of low, spreading habit with very 
double soft pink flowers. New. 75c-$1.00. 
Vulgaris Minima. A gem for the rockery. Very compact, mossy foliage. 
Purple flowers. 4-6 in. •25-50c. 
Vulgaris Minima Smith’s Var. Dark green foliage turning red in the 
fall. Purple flowers in August and September. 2-3 in. Rare and 
new. $1.00. 
Vulgaris Mrs. H. E. Beall. Very lovely, soft pink double flowers. Very 
