~- A. Nummularia. A small shrub of 6 in. or so, the branches abundantly 
clothed in small oval shining leaves; urn-shaped flowers waxy and 
white; fruit red. $1.00. 
Azalea J. T. Lovett. Discovered 35 years ago in the Japanese Emperor’s 
garden, Slow-growing evergreen; completely covers itself in June with 
heavy watermelon-pink funnels. Small plants 50c. 
A. Gumpo. A small evergreen bush from Japan. Very free-blooming; 
large pure white flowers. Small plants 50c. 
Bruckenthalia spiculifolia. 8 in. Fine heath-like foliage, the branches 
terminated by clusters of salmon-pink flowers. Requires occasional 
division or the centers die out. 50c. 
C. alluna vulgaris County Wicklow. More prostrate than C. v. H. E. 
Beale; with similar flowers. Aug. 50c. 
Cc. v. J. H. Hamilton. Undoubtedly the finest heather yet introduced. 
Compact moss-like dark green growth; 8 in. upright spikes of clear 
bright pink—a wonderful “carrying” color; flowers double. 50c -75c. 
C. v. Foxii nana. An enchanting small closely packed cushion of erin- 
green; rosy-purple flowers just emerge from the foliage. 50c. 
C. v. minima Little Gem. Very compact and upward-growing; it finally 
shapes into a miniature conifer-like group. 60c. 
Cc. v. m. Smith’s var. A close mossy growth, green and russet; flowers 
negligible. Can be used as turf among stepping stones. 25c. 
‘+ Cassiope sp. From the mountains of S.E. Oregon. A tiny moss-like 
shrub with slender diverging branches; white lily-of-the-valley-like 
bells. $1.00 
Cassiope fastigiata. A fastigiate litle bush; scale-like leaves imbricated 
to form whip-like branches; flowers snow-white urns. Himalaya. $1.00. 
Cassiope lycopodioides. From the mountains of Japan. A dark green pelt- 
like cushion of slender overlapping branches beset with scale-like 
leaves. White waxy bells. $1.00 - $2.00. 
‘++ C. lycopodioides. From Alaska. So different from above that it is difficult 
to believe it is the same plant. Branches much thicker, upstanding; 
open in habit, $1.00. 
‘: C. Mertensiana. A more wooden coarse plant than above, but very 
decorative; demands a damp cool place. 50c. 
‘++ Cladothamnus pyrolaeflorus. Very slow-growing, eventually reaching 
3 ft. Branches erect; deciduous; peach-colored somewhat azalea-like 
flowers. $1.00. 
‘+ Epigaea repens. Trailing arbutus or May-flower of the eastern wood- 
lands. It must have cool shade and really acid soil. Mats 75c - $1.00. 
mer) ake 
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