Fl 



owermg 



Shrubi 



Vibu 



itosum plicatum 



Viburnum, continued 



Lantana. \\ avjarin^ Tree. Grows lo to 15 feet high. 

 Leaves heart-shaped, wrinkled, dark green above and 

 downy beneath. Flowers white in flat-topped clusters 

 usually. Berries bright red changing to black. 3 to 

 4 feet, 50 cts. each. 



Lentago. Shcepherry. The foliage is a light, glossy 

 green; flowers creamy white and fragrant. Fruit black. 

 2 to 3 feet, 50 cts. each. 



Opulus. Higb-Bush Cranbern: A shrub 8 to 10 feet 

 high with spreading branches. Leaves bright green. 

 Flowers white in flat clusters in late spring and early 

 summer. Berries showy, bright scarlet, persisting ail 

 winter. 3 to 4 feet, 50 cts. each. 



Opulus nanum. Dwarf Cranberry Bush. A very 

 dwarf, compact shrub. Specimens, 2^2 X 2 feet, $1 ea. 



Opulus sterile. Common Snowball. Hardy shrub 

 with showy flowers produced in large globular clusters. 

 All the flowers are sterile and appear in spring. Each 



3 to 4 feet So 50 



4 to 5 feet 75 



X'iburnuni, continued 

 Plicatum. Japamsc Snowball. The choicest of its 

 class. Pure white, ball-shaped clusters of flowers in 

 May. Each 



2 to 3 feet $0 50 I 4 to 5 feet Si 00 



3 to 4 feet -5 I 



Tomentosum. Sini-lc Japanese Snowball. Leaves 

 dark green with broi./v ni.irgins. Flowers uhile in flat- 



B.i 



L-s red. 



ack. 



Weigela (Diervilla) 



Hardy, free-flowering shrubs of spreading habit, 

 thriving best in moist, loamy soil, and producing in late 

 spring and early summer great masses of showy flowers. 



Amabilis (D. florida). Rose-colored Weigela. A 

 free-flowering shrub, 6 feet tall, with numerous spread- 

 ing branches. Leaves dark green. Flowers rose-colored, 

 large, and showy. 3 to 4 feet, 50 cts. each. 



Amabilis Candida. Similar to the above, except in 

 point of color. This is the best white, flowering more or 

 less throughout the season. Each 



4 to 5 feet So 50 



5 to 6 feet -5 



Hybrida, Eva Rathke. Very floriferous, growing 



about 5 to 6 feet high. Flowers large; bright, ruby-car- 

 mine. A general favorite. 3 to 4 feet, 50 cts. each. 



Rosea. The commonest and a favorite, with rosy 

 pink flowers in .June. 3 to 4 feet, 50 cts. each. 



Rosea nana variegata. Variegated Weigela. This is 

 a variegated form of the above, enriching the collection 

 of the fancy-colored foliage group. It is dwarf; the 

 leaves variegated with white. Flowers white or slightly 

 sufl'used with rose. E.ich 



3 to 4 feet $050 



4 to 5 feet 75 



Xanthoceras 



Chinese Flowering Chestnut 



Sorbifolia. Flowers in long racemes, pure white with 

 an orange blotch at the base of each petal. Fruit green, 

 about 2 inches long, borne in clusters. 2 to 3 feet, 50c. ea. 



Xanthorrhiza 



Apiifolia. Sbrubbv Yellow- Root. A low, dense-grow- 

 ing shrub with handsome compound leaves which assume 

 rich tints during the autumn months. Can bt used suc- 

 cessfully under trees where the shade is dense, but 

 thrives well in the exposed places, i to i ■ , feet, 50 cts. 

 each. I to 2 feet, 75 cts. each. Special quotations 

 where quantity is desired. 



Weigela rosea 



27 



