COMPLETE LANDSCAPE SERVICE 
0 
DOGWOOD, Golden Twig. 6—7 feet. This plant 
has -golden bark, is spreading, and produces a 
good screen plant. Berries and blooms are 
white. 
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Garden Talk 
Gray Bark. 5-6 feet. Noted for Fall color and 
fruit for birds; slender in habit. 2-3 feet, 50c; 
3-4 feet, 75c. 
Red Twigged. 6-7 feet. Wide spreading habit; 
excellent for Winter color. Produces white 
flowers and fruits. 2-3 feet, 35c; 3-4 feet, 50c. 
Variegated Leaved. 4-5 feet. The variegated green 
and white foliage contrasts beautifully in shrub 
plantings. An excellent medium sized plant 
with red twigs. 2-3 feet, 60c each; 3-4 feet, 
75c each. 
ELDERBERRY, Black-berried. 6-8 feet. The 
old-fashioned elderberry used so much for jelly 
and wine making—get there ahead of the birds. 
Cutleaf. 6-7 feet. Has fine cut foliage, fine 
branches, white flowers, and edible fruit. 
Golden Leaf. 6-7 feet. A finer-branched shrub 
than the black-berried. Golden foliage. Fruits 
are excellent for bird food. 
EUONYMUS ALATUS, Wing Barked. 5-6 
feet. An unusual shrub with wing-like bark. 
Red fruit and a never-to-be-forgotten Fall color. 
2-3 feet, 75c each; 3-4 feet, $1.00 each. New— 
Rare—Attractive. 
Common Buming-Bush. 6-7 feet. Produces great 
masses of berries resembling Bittersweet. Very 
effective for Fall color. Slender in habit of 
growth. 2-3 feet, 50c; 3-4 feet, 75c. 
FORSYTHIA, Golden Bell. 5-6 feet. Few Spring 
flowering shrubs produce the beautiful effects of 
this plant. Excellent in masses. 3-4 feet, 75c 
each. 
The spread of a shrub usually will approximate its height. 
You can space accordingly but must remember this does 
not give you an immediate full effect in planting. With the 
large shrubs it is best to plant these 4 to 5 feet apart and 
then keep them shaped to fit the border. 
Do NOT OVERLOOK pruning the shrubs at the proper time. 
Terminal blooming plants like the Hydrangeas, Spirea An¬ 
thony Waterer, etc., are better pruned annually. Otherwise 
all shrubs that blossom previous to June 25 should be pruned 
when necessary immediately after the blossoms fall. Of 
course. Fall or Winter pruning is not injurious to any plant, 
although it will remove some of next season’s bloom when 
the pla7it sets its buds on this wood. 
The COMMON ERROR of most landscape architects and also 
amateur planters is to overplant. Better a year of patience 
a7id then the years of satisfaction that follow, than over¬ 
crowded masses of shrubs that cannot give the best effect. 
Immediate effects can be secured by using larger shrubs, but 
they should be spaced the proper distance. 
You will find that The Daniels Nursery, knowing plant 
materials, will follow these rules carefully. 
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White Flowered. 10 feet. Resembles the pink 
flowered variety in habit of growth; produces 
white flowers and red fruit. 
HYDRANGEA, Hills of Snow. 3-4 feet. A mass 
of white, heavy flowers in mid-summer. Excel¬ 
lent for foundation planting. 
Pee Gee. 3-4 feet. Pink flowers in the Fall, color¬ 
ing to varied shades. This plant should be cut 
back severely each Fall or Spring to induce 
large flowers. 
HONEYSUCKLE, Morrows. 5-6 feet. Semi¬ 
spreading, light foliage, red fruit, white flowers. 
Belle Albida. 8-10 feet. White flowers; upright 
hardy shrub. Very satisfactory for informal 
hedge plants or screens. 
Pink Flowered. 8-10 feet. The best known of all 
this family. Produces pink flowers in May, 
followed by masses of fruit in mid-season. 2-3 
feet, 35c each; 3-4 feet, 50c each. 
HOLLY, Winterberry. 5-6 feet. A hardy, slow 
growing shrub of the holly family with bright 
red berries lasting into the Winter. 2-3 feet, 
75c each; 3-4 feet, $1.00 each. 
JUNEBERRY. 6-7 feet. Produces masses of 
white, fragrant flowers in the Spring. This is 
followed by bright red berries turning to purple, 
resembling the blueberry in flavor. Excellent 
for sauce if, as we said before, you get there 
ahead of the birds. 
LILACS, Common Purple. 6-8 feet. Produces 
masses of purple flowers. Usually requires 4 to 
5 years to come into bloom. 
Common White. 6-8 feet. Similar in habit of 
growth to the purple variety. White flowers. 
Common purple and white lilacs at 2-3 feet, 
30c each; 3^ feet, 40c each; 4-5 feet, 75c each. 
Persian. 6-7 feet. A fine leaved, many branched 
variety. Does not sucker like the common va¬ 
rieties. Truly the queen of the early flowering 
shrubs. 
Rothmagensis. 6-7 feet. Of the same habit as the 
Persian but produces larger flowers with a red¬ 
dish-purple tinge. The best of the Persian va¬ 
rieties. 
Villosa. 8-10 feet. Late flowering—pink lilac. Has 
large leaves, gray stems, and is excellent for 
background plantings. 
