Choice Grafted Lilacs 
Improved Varieties 
1720 OCEAN AVE., SAN FRANCISCO 
Plant November to April. 
Beautiful spring-flowering shrubs with very 
fragrant flowers in large clusters. Immedi¬ 
ately after blooming they should be pruned, 
as the flowers are always on the old wood. 
Grafted varieties will usually bloom the first 
year. 
DOUBLE VARIETIES 
Condorcet. Almost pure blue. Best double 
of its color. (Illustration lower right 
corner). 
Jeanne d’Arc. Easily the best double white. 
Katherine Havemeyer. Buds mauve op¬ 
ening lilac-blue. Flowers large. Clusters 
on long stems. 
Marechal Lannes. Pinkish mauve. Indi¬ 
vidual flowers exceptionally large. Semi¬ 
double. (Illustration lower left corner). 
Mrs. Edward Harding. Rosy carmine. 
Took a special prize as best “red” lilac. 
A fine variety. (Illustration upper left 
corner). 
Pres. Fallieres. Lavender. Its enormous 
compound clusters are largest of all. (Cen¬ 
ter illustration). 
SINGLE VARIETIES 
Jan Van Tol. Snow white. Probably the 
best single white. 
Lamartine. Mauve-pink. Very large com¬ 
pound clusters. 
Mirabeau. Mauve opening bluish. Earliest 
of all. 
Volcan. Buds deepest imaginable purple. 
Flowers dark purple. Was a sensation at 
Oakland Spring Garden Show. 
Any of the above Lilacs: 2*4 to 3}4 
feet, $1.00 each; 5 for $4.50, postpaid. 
The entire collection of 10 for $8.50, 
Youngberry. 
Youngberry 
Earliest and heaviest yielding berry of this class. The 
large, luscious berries are rich, sweet, and juicy, yet 
firm, with but few seeds. A cross between the Logan 
and Gardena Dewberry. Strong plants, 15c each; 
75c for 6, postpaid. 
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