Vistas 71 



4 — Forsythia intermedia: erect golden bells; twelve feet high; 

 any soil; yellow blossoms the same as Forsythia suspensa, F.; 

 fine clear foliage. 



5 — Cornus candidissima: panicled cornel; fifteen feet high; an 

 upright-growing, dense shrub with smooth gray branches; 

 tiny white blossoms in closely packed clusters, numerous 

 and attractive; blossoms in May and June; ornamental 

 white berries follow. 



6 — Cornus alba, Sibirica: Siberian dogwood; ten feet high; 

 any soil and will do well in sun or shade; erect-growing, 

 with bright red branches and twigs ; small white flowers in 

 flat clusters; blossoms in May and June; has bluish- white 

 berries. 



7 — Viburnum pruni folium: black haw or stag bush; fifteen feet 

 high; any soil; tiny white flowers in dense clusters four 

 inches broad ; blossoms in April or May. 



8 — SpircBa VanHouttei: VanHoutte's spirea; six to eight feet 

 high; any soil; slender arching branches; dense rotind 

 clusters of small white flowers which weigh the branches 

 down and cover the bush; blossoms in May and June. 



9 — Lonicera Morrowi: bush honeysuckle; eight feet high; any 

 ordinary soil; flowers white changing to yellow; blossoms 

 in May and June ; is covered with very ornamental translu- 

 cent ruby-colored fruits which persist a long time. 



10 — Diervilla, Eva Rathke: hybrid Weigela; six to eight feet high; 

 a rather moist soil and partial shade; abundant deep red 

 flowers ; blossoms in Jvme and on during the summer. 



This two-hundred-foot group may be broken up into smaller 

 groups in almost any way that seems desirable. Trees alone 



