EXOCHORDIA 
GRANDIFLORA (Pearl Bush). This shrub 
Very often resembles a tree with age. Early 
buds look like pearls, opening- up in early 
May to sprays of pure white flowers. 
BUSH HONEYSUCKLE 
BELLA ALBIDA. Flowers white, berries red, 
in great fragrant clusters. 
BELLA ROSEA. Flowers pale rose, berries 
red, in fragrant clusters. 
FRAGRANTISSIMA. Small round leathery 
leaves, very dark green, which are practical¬ 
ly evergreen if planted in a sheltered place. 
Its tiny clusters of pink and white flowers 
are sweetly fragrant. 
GRAJVDIPLORA ROSEA. Pink Tartarian 
Honeysuckle. The tallest bush and the larg¬ 
est flowers of any of the Honeysuckles. In 
June this shrub is densely covered with 
tender rose-pink blooms. 
KOROLKOWI. Blue Leaf Honeysuckle. The 
light coral-pink flowers are well set off 
against the blue green foliage. The bush is 
very fine twigged and so dense that it makes 
a wonderful plant. 
MORROWI. Dense wide flung branches mak¬ 
ing a dense well rounded bush. The small 
creamy white blooms are quite showy but 
the blood red berries which follow makes the 
bush one of the best summser fruiting shrubs. 
TARTARIAN ALBA. Flowers bluish white, 
and the bush is dense and hardy. 
HYDRANGEA 
ARBORESCENS GRANDIFLORA. Plills of 
Snow. In a mass the large bunch of flowers 
resemble a large bank of snow. They bloom 
from July to September. By cutting back 
to the crown each year, they may be kept 
round and dense. Excellent for foundation 
planting. 
PANICULATA GRANDIFLORA. Fine as tall 
hedges or may be pruned to round compact 
clumps. Wonderfully attractive when laden 
with their massive blooms, first snow white, 
then pink, then reddish bronze. They may 
be used alone as specimens or among other 
plants in a group. 
P. G. TREE SHAPED. May be well used in 
background or alone. The spreading green 
head with flowers at the end of the branches 
is well above the straight bare trunk. 
KOLKWITZIA 
BEAUTYBUSH. This shrub has a general 
resemblance to both weigelia and honey¬ 
suckle. The beautiful trumpet shaped flow¬ 
ers appearing in great profusion in June, in 
pairs which cluster closely in cymes of about 
twenty-five. Flowers are all tipped pale 
pink with orange veins in the throat, the 
buds being much darker. 
LILAC 
SYRINGA 
COMMON PURPLE. Best used in mass plant¬ 
ings. Flower light purple. 
COMMON WHITE. Slender and upright with 
large white blooms. 
PERSIAN. Medium growing with slender 
branches topped with a purple spiked flower. 
Phi lade Ipltus Ylrginalis 
French Hybrid Lilacs 
BELLE DE NANCY. Large flowers of rose 
satiny white. 
CHARLES JOLY. Dwarf, violet and wine 
purple. 
MME. ABEL CHATNEY. Beautiful buds up 
into massive pure white flowers. 
PRESIDENT GREVY. A compact flower of 
deep blue. 
LUDWIG SPATHE. Darkest of the blues, a 
deep purple shade. 
PHILADELPHUS 
MOCK ORANGE 
ALBATRE. Has showy dense clusters of 
white double flowers. The plant is bushy 
and of medium heighth. 
AUREA. Golden Syringa. Very valuable to 
use in contrast with green foliaged shrubs. 
Foliage is small refined, dense and a very 
brilliant yellow. 
CORONARIUS. Blooms in very graceful 
sprays in May. Flowers white and slightly 
scented. May be used for tall screens. 
YIRGINALIS. A magnificent new variety, 
with good foliage and a compact habit of 
growth. The flowers (double, semi-double, 
and single) are the largest, handsomest, and 
most sweetly fragrant variety of all the 
mock-oranges. It blooms the earliest and 
also the longest. It is without question the 
leader of the mock-oranges. 
NORMA. The flowers are single but large 
and pure white and are borne in large num¬ 
bers. They are glossy white with pale yel¬ 
low stamens. 
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