PETRIE LANDSCAPE NURSERIES 
16 
H. quercifolia —Oak leaved hydrangea. A 
native of the Allegheny Mountains. 
Foliage striking and wonderfully col¬ 
ored in fall. Bloom creamy white. 
2 to 3 feet.$1.50 
3 to 4 feet. 2.00 
Hypericum densiflorum —One of the best 
of the shrubby St. John’s worts. 
None large enough till fall. 
12 to 18 inches $ .50 
18 to 21 inches. .60 
Ilex verticilata —Winterberry. A deciduous 
holly with bright persistent red berries. 
Must be planted in groups to berry up. 
2 to 3 feet.$ .75 
Itea virginica —Virginia willow. A dwarf 
shrub with gorgeous red fall foliage and 
white bloom in July. 
12 to 18 inches . $ .50 
18 to 24 inches . .75 
Kalmia latifolia —Mountain laurel. Must 
have peat to do well. Lovely broad leaved 
evergreen. Bloom deep rose to pure 
white. 
18 inches . $2.50 
Kerria japonicci —Globe Flower. Graceful 
green barked shrub with yellow globe¬ 
like flowers for a good while in summer. 
2 to 3 feet.$ .75 
Kolkwitzia amabilis — Beauty bush. This 
plant has made good. It is one of the 
loveliest of the pink spring shrubs. Sim¬ 
ilar to weigelia but hardy. 
12 to 18 inches..$ .50 
2 to 3 feet.75 
3 to 4 feet. 1.00 
Laburnum vulgare —Golden chain. Large 
shrubs with golden chain of locust-like 
flowers in summer. 
3 to 4 feet.$ .75 
4 to 6 feet. 1.00 
L1GUSTRUM 
The Privets 
Lipustrum ibota regelianum — Regel’s 
Privet. A tall wide-spreading form with 
horizontal branches. Good as specimens, 
in borders, or for wide, untrimmed 
hedges. Big bushy plants. 
2 to 3 feet.$ .60 
3 to 4 feet.75 
L. nanmn compaction —Lodense Privet. A 
very hardy dwarf privet that can be 
used as a boxwood substitute. These 
are all bushy specimen plants. 
12 inches .$ .35 
18 to 24 inch spread. 1.00 
24 to 30 inch spread. 1.50 
Hedging grade .$12.50 per 100 
L. vulgare —English privet. The best 
hedge type. 
Hedging grade $10.00 per 100 
L. vulgare leucocarpum -—A yellow berried 
form of English privet. Shrubs with 
yellow berries are scarce. 
3 to 4 feet .$ .75 
4 to 6 feet . 1.00 
LONICERA 
The Honeysuckles 
Lonicera alberti —A semi-prostrate Hon¬ 
eysuckle with rosy pink bloom, gray 
blue foliage and red berries. 
Pot grown .$ .75 
L. fragrantissima —Winter honeysuckle. 
A semi-evergreen, losing its leaves 
about Christmas and blossoming 
in March with pale colored exception¬ 
ally fragrant bloom. 
3 to 4 feet . . $ .75 
L. korolkowi— Turkestan honeysuckle. A 
beautiful large shrub with lovely pink 
flowers and red fruits hanging in a mist 
of grayish foliage. 
2 to 3 feet .$ .60 
6 to 8 feet . 2.50 
L. maackii podocarpa— Amur honeysuckle. 
Foliage glossy, hanging till Decem¬ 
ber. Berries persist all winter or till 
the birds get them. The showiest of 
the honeysuckles. 
2 to 3 feet . $ .60 
3 to 4 feet .75 
4 to 6 feet . 1.00 
L. morrowi —Morrow’s Honeysuckle. Gray 
gi'een foliage, white bloom, orange col- 
lored berries in summer. 
2 to 3 feet . $ .50 
3 to 4 feet .60 
L. tatarica —Tartarian Honeysuckle. The 
most common of the bush honeysuckles. 
Bloom pink followed by masses of red 
to yellow berries which are loved by 
our bird neighbors. 
3 to 4 feet . $ .60 
4 to 6 feet .75 
THE MAGNOEIAS 
The following group of Magnolias has 
proven hardy under our conditions. 
Numbers of them have been in Boise 
for thirty years and are their owners’ 
pride. They like a little peat in their 
soil but can get along without it. 
Magnolia kobus — A Japanese species 
growing in its native land to 80 feet. 
Blossom white 4 to five inches across 
in April and May. 
2 to 3 feet .$2.00 
3 to 4 feet . 3.00 
M. Soulangeana —Popular shrub with 
large white flowers with a purple flush 
on the outside. Large bloom in April. 
18 to 24 inches .$4.00 
