To 11,000 ft. N. E. Burma. Introduced by Reginald Farrer 1919. $1.00. 
x x xX X R. campylocarpum. Foliage dark and glossy; flowers bell-shaped, 
2-3 in. wide, yellow. Very floriferous and one of the best of the Eton: 
flowered species. Sikkim. $3.50. 
*%* R. carolinianum. Grows to 3 ft. Beautiful leathery leaves suffused in 
winter with crimson. Seedlings from plant with especially pretty pink 
flowers. N. Carolina. Introduced by John Fraser 1810. 75c. 
x R. charitostreptum. A dwarf shrub with bright green foliage and slay 
yellow flowers set off by scarlet stamens. $1.00. 
x x x R. chasmanthoides. Au attractive floriferous bush with rose-laven- 
der flowers with green spots and lines. S. E. Tibet. Introduced by 
George Forrest 1918. $1.50. 
R. chrysanthum. A rare plant said to grow to a foot; our form is a per- 
fectly prostrate creeping plant with leathery, deeply veined leaves. 
In time it makes a wide mat. Flowers yellow. Siberia and N. BE. Asia. 
$2.00. 
x x x R. ciliatum. Grows to 18 in. and over. Crimson budded aging to 
pink. Said to be the most floriferous rhododendron in existence. Val- 
uable as a thicket group, making a most interesting low jungle, or as 
a single specimen. Sikkim. $1.50. 
x x X R. ciliicalyx. Foliage bristly and scaly. Funnel-like flowers, white 
with yellow blotch, 4 in. across. Possibly only for the cool greenhouse 
in Washington. W. Yunnan. Introduced by Jean M. Delavay 1884. 
x x x R. cilpinense. A hybrid of R. ciliatum and R. moupinense. The 
foliage is intermediate between that of parents with flowers larger 
than those of either; bright crimson in bud, opening to strong apple- 
blossom pink. My favorite hybrid for March and April. $1.50. 
R. concinnum. A little known densely twiggy shrub with crimson spot- 
ted purple flowers. Western China. Introduced by E. H. Wilson 1904. 
$1.50. 
R. cremastum. A little known dwarf bush; well branched and twiggy 
with aromatic leaves. Each branch terminates in a truss of waxy bells, 
about 14 in. long and of a deep dark clear rose. The plant in bloom is 
a spectacle. $1.25. 
x x x R. croceum. Grows to a large bush; leaves rounded, sometimes 
heart-shaped, dark green, Flowers shallow, 14 in. deep and twice as 
wide, opening clear yellow from pinkish buds. Free-blooming and a 
lovely thing. N. W. Yunnan. Introduced by George Forrest 1917. $1.00. 
x x R. cyanocarpum. Leaves oval and thick, somewhat blue-green. 
Flowers 2 in. long, white or cream, tinged with pale or deep pink. 
At 10,000 ft. N. W. Yunnan. Introduced by George Forrest 1906. $1.00. 
pana “oe 
