HARLAN P. KELSEY, Owner, SALEM, MASS. 
PRICES ARE AT BOXFORD NURSERY 
Sambucus canadensis (American Eldar) see page 32 
Spiraea thunbergl. Snow Garland. 3 to 4 ft. 
Flowers cover the plant like a mantle of 
snow. Each 10 100 
2 to 3 ft $0 50 $4 00 $30 00 
tomentosa. Steeple Bush. 
Each 10 100 
2 to 3 ft to so $4 00 $30 00 
vanhouttei. Bridal Wreath. 5 to 6 ft. 
Graceful shrub, with arching branches; one 
of the best. Each 10 100 
1 to 2 ft Jo 30 $2 00 $18 00 
2 to 3 ft SO 4 00 30 00 
3 to 4 ft 75 o 00 
STEPHANANDRA flexuosa. 3 to 5 ft. Droop- 
ing branches and deeply cut leaves; white 
flowers in soft feathery racemes. 
Each io 100 
2 to 3 ft $0 35 $3 00 $25 00 
3 to 4 ft. 45 4 00 30 00 
STEWARTIA pentagyna. Southern Stew- 
artia. 6 to 15 ft. This, the so-called "Amer- 
ican Camellia," is one of the most rare and 
beautiful of all North American shrubs. 
Erect, well-foliaged. and with large, axillary 
flowers, 3 to 4 inches across, with white 
creamy petals, deeply crenulated in the 
margins, resembling the single camellia. 
June. Each 
iyi to 2 ft $0 so 
STYRAX japonica. 6 to 15 ft. A most beau- 
tiful and graceful tree-like shrub; flowers 
bell-like, in drooping racemes literally 
covering the plant. Each 10 100 
6 to 12 in $0 25 $2 00 $15 00 
I to I 1 . ft 40 3 50 30 00 
SYMPHORICARPOS pauciflorus. 3 to 5 ft. 
One of the best species of Snowberry. 
Each 10 
1 to ft Jo 40 I3 50 
racemosus. Snowberry. 3 to 5 ft. A native, 
with very showy, pure white fruit hanging 
in large clusters until late winter. 
Each 10 100 
1 to 2 ft $0 3S $3 00 $20 00 
2 to 3 ft 45 4 00 30 00 
racemosus laevigatas. Each to 
2 to 4 in. Seedlings Jo 30 $2 50 
vulgaris. Coral-berry, or Indian Currant. 
3 to 6 ft. The red or purplish fruit is pro- 
duced in great profusion and hangs on till 
earlv spring. Each 10 100 
1 to 2 ft Jo 20 $1 50 $t2 00 
2 to 3 ft 30 2 50 20 00 
3 to 4 ft so 4 00 30 00 
LILACS ON THEIR OWN 
ROOTS 
Fine collection of some of the best and newest 
hybrids in specimen stock. It is only recently 
that Lilacs on their own roots were ob- 
tainable. 
Ordinary stock is grafted on Privet, which 
"suckers" badly, often crowding out and killing 
the grafted top and leaving a Privet instead of 
a Lilac. The Lilac is the queen of spring-flower- 
ing shrubs, and the new hybrids mark an epoch 
in horticulture. For a tall hedge or screen there 
33 
