26 POMONA NURSERIES, DANSVILLE, TV. Y.— NOTHING OVER TEN CENTS 
Select Varieties of Hardy Flowering Shrubs 
A HEDGE OF HARDY BUSH HYDRANGEA 
Hardy Bush Hydrangea (Paniculata Grandiflora) — We urge our friends to plant the Hydrangea. Plant it for 
the following reasons : It is hardy, enduring the severest winters out doors without protection. It is easily 
transplanted, not one in a thousand dying. It never fails to blossom the first year planted ; no matter how 
small the plant, it immediately buds out in great profusion of flowers, many of them as large as the head 
of a full grown child. When the specimens first open they are greenish white, later they turn to a pure 
white, and still later to a delicate pink. 
DEUTZIA 
This valuable species of plants comes to us from 
Japan. Their hardiness, luxuriant foliage and profus- 
ion of attractive flowers, render them deservedly 
among the most popular of flowering shrubs. The 
flowers are produced in June in racemes four to six 
inches long. 
DEUTZIA, PRIDE OF ROCHESTER 
Deutzia Pride of Rochester — A new variety raised from 
Deutzia Crenata, and exceeding all others in size 
of flowers, length of panicles, profuseness of 
bloom and vigorous habit; a charming acquisition 
to the list of Deutzias. 
Deutzia Double Flowering (Crenata) — Flowers double 
white, tinged with rose. One of the most desir- 
able flowering shrubs in cultivation. 
Deutzia Slender Branched (Gracilis) — A charming var- 
iety introduced by Dr. Siebold. Flowers pure 
white and so delicate that they are very desirable 
for decorative purposes. 
Deutzia Lemoinei — Flowers pure white, borne on stout 
branches of upright growth. Dwarf and free 
flowering, much prized for cemetery planting and 
in front of taller shrubbery. 
Syringa— European Fragrant or “Mock Orange” (Phil- 
adelphia Coronarius) — A well-known very hardy 
shrub, with showy white flowers which are very 
fragrant. 
Viburnum Opulus (High Bush Cranberry) — Handsome, 
dense, brilliant green foliage; a rich setting of 
large bunches of crimson berries which enliven 
the late summer and persist on bare branches in 
the winter. 
Canstota, N. Y., Sept. 22, ’15. 
Pomona Nurseries, Dansville, N. Y. 
The stock I sent for last spring is fine and all 
growing. 
I never had better when I paid 35c. each for them. 
Very truly yours, 
Anson Burlingame. 
Pomona Price for all varieties of Flowering Shrubs 15 to 18 inches high, 10 cents each, 10 for $1.00. 
