PITTSVILLE, MARYLAND 9 
SSF SEN I FESS SE SO SESE S/T EA SSSI EE EEE SEED 
NO. 128. A hybrid of Kaempferi and Snow. Plant compact, 
low spreading. Flowers white, hose-in-hose, throat faintly 
marked, petals broad, open, nearly flat. 
NO. 145. A hybrid of Kaempferi and Obtusum. Plant erect, 
somewhat like Kaempferi. Foliage persistent. Flowers 
vivid scarlet when first open, very abundant, 1% inches 
A throat faintly marked with darker dots, hose-in- 
ose. 
NO. 150. A hybrid of Kaempferi and Snow. Plant Kaemp- 
feri habit. Foliage semi-persistent. Flowers vivid deep pink 
fading to salmon-pink, 1% inches across, throat faintly 
marked with darker dots, hose-in-hose, petals slightly 
wavy. 
NO. 180. A hybrid of Kaempferi and Snow. Form simi- 
lar to Kaempferi. Foliage semi-persistent. Flowers 
light pink tinted lavender, 1%, inches across, throat 
ote with dark pink dots, hose-in-hose, petals broad, 
at. 
NO. 200. A hybrid of Kaempferi and Snow. Plant erect 
spreading. Flowers vivid carmine-pink, 2 inches across, 
hose-in-hose, throat with darker dots, petals broad, flat. 
NO. 203. A hybrid of Kaempferi and Snow. Plant well 
branched from base. Flowers rose-pink, 1% inches across, 
hose-in-hose, petals broad, lighter at base of tube. 
NO. 205. A hybrid of Kaempferi and Obtusum. Well 
branched, erect-spreading. Flowers rose, tinted lavender, 
throat faintly marked with red dots, hose-in-hose, 1% 
inches across. 
U.S. D.A. AZALEAS 
Some years ago the U. S. Dept. of Agriculture introduced a 
collection of Azaleas mostly from Japan. We have been 
growing these Azaleas many years and have.selected the 
following varieties as the best ones in this collection: They 
are well worth trying. 
BENI KIRISHIMA (No. 77113). A semi-double form; the 
flowers are old-rose to Eugenia-pink. 
CARMINATA SPLENDENS (No. 78376). Flowers a deep 
pink, of the general type of the Kurume Azaleas. 
GIBIYAMA (No. 77091). Pale Amparo-purple and phlox- 
purple. Five-lobed, starry Kurume. 
HATSUSHIMO (No. 77138). Large flowering, white and 
deep pink variation. Very showy. 
HINOHAKAMA (N. 77126 R. sp.). Rose purple flowers. 
HO-ODEN (No. 77112 R. sp.). Hose-in-hose flowers about 
ae pepe in diameter. Thulite pink irregularly edged 
with white. 
KACHO-NO-KAWA. Single; lavender-rose with red throat. 
Early. Large flowers; compact. 
KACHO-NO-MAI. Large, dark pink, low grower. Late June. 
KAGARIBI (No. 77102). Very bright orange-red, heavy 
bloomer and quite showy. 
MACRANTHA (No. 78380). Flowers deep salmon. Late 
flowering, compact with narrow leaves. 
MACROSTEMON (No. 77690). A low half-evergreen Japa- 
nese shrub with pubescent elliptic-oblong leaves half an 
inch long and salmon-red flowers an inch across having 
stamens twice as long as the corolla. 
SATSUKI (No. 77104). The flowers are deep rose-pink. 
SHISHU (No. 77141). Single, large deep purple-layender 
flowers. Early. 
YAESHOJO (No. 77100). Flaming red. One of the earliest 
to flower. A tall grower and one of the showiest of Azaleas. 
Plan to Vist Our Nursery 
We will certainly be glad to have you come to see 
our stock for yourself. We believe you will find it 
compares favorably with that grown by other nur- 
series. Some of our customers have told us it is better 
than is furnished by some others. We are on the 
Eastern Shore of Maryland, 100 miles south of Wil- 
mington, Delaware, 100 miles from Kiptopeke- 
Norfolk, Va. ferry, 90 miles from Annapolis, Md., 
via Matapeake ferry, 150 miles from Baltimore, Md., 
via Elkton, Md., 225 miles from New York, N. Y. 
We hope you can come to see our stock. It is good 
driving on the famous Eastern Shore. 
