Ltie Garden Magazine, April, 1920 
139 
Japanese 
Turquoise Berry 
Grows 6 feet high. Showy flowers in May. 
Blue berries in September. So pretty one 
wishes they might linger all the year instead 
of only six weeks. We hope we have enough to 
go around 
We have illustrated this and a few other rare shrubs 
in their true colors in a new booklet appropriately called 
“A Feast ol Flowers” 
We have just 500 copies left. Naturally the most 
interested will be the first to write. It is free. 
Hicks Nurseries, Box M, Westbury, L. I., New York 
f 
Hardy Native Plants, Ferns and Azaleas 
Announcement for 1920 
Osmunda Claytoniana 
Our Collection of Native Ferns Is The Best In America 
My 1920 catalogue with many illustrations 
of hardy native plants, ferns and azaleas, is 
now ready, and I should be pleased to send 
you a copy if you are interested in such plants. 
For 40 years I have been growing ferns, 
wild flowers, orchids, azaleas, and many other 
hardy native plants that are of great value in 
the rock garden. It has taken many years 
of painstaking labor, and a great deal of ex- 
pense to be able to offer this collection. I 
am especially proud of my collections of 
ferns and azaleas. 
My stocks not only include these rare 
plants, but they are sufficiently large to en- 
able me to take care of large as well as 
small orders. 
I also have choice stocks of native rhodo- 
dendrons, laurels, evergreen shrubs and 
perennials of all sorts. 
EDWARD GILLETT 
3 Main St. Southwick, Mass. 
