Hicks Nurseries, Inc., Westbury, N. Y. 49 
Lonicera • The Bush Honeysuckle 
Handsome, upright shrubs, valuable for border or mass plant¬ 
ing. Most varieties have showy flowers, some very fragrant, and 
bright berries which are the principal food-supply of the catbirds 
and robins during July and August. 
LONICERA demissa. Dense, small-leaved shrub, 
handsome in autumn. Scarlet fruit. Each 
2 to 3 ft. high.$0 50 
3 to 4 ft. high. 75 
4 to 5 ft. high. 1 00 
5 to 6 ft. high. 1 25 
L. fragrantissima. Winter Honeysuckle. A big, 
broad shrub with fragrant yellow flowers from 
January to May. It holds its bright green foli¬ 
age until Christmas. 
2 to 3 ft. high. 50 
3 to 4 ft. high. 75 
L. maacki. Amur Honeysuckle. Attractive, large 
shrub with white blossoms standing erect along 
the branches. Handsome scarlet fruit. 
2 to 3 ft. high. 50 
3 to 4 ft. high. 75 
6 to 7 ft. high. 3 00 
L. morrowi. Morrow Honeysuckle. Extensively 
used in large plantations because of its wide- 
spreading habit, keeping full at the base. It has 
cream-colored flowers in June. 
2 to 3 ft. high. 50 
3 to 4 ft. high. 75 
L. standishi. Standish Honeysuckle. Fragrant, 
cream blossoms, sometimes covered with ice in 
early spring. Grows 5 to 7 feet high. 
2 to 3 ft. high. 75 
L. syringantha. Lilac Honeysuckle. Fragrant, 
pale rose-lilac flowers. An attractive, slow- 
growing shrub. 
2 to 3 ft. high. .. 75 
L. tatarica. Tatarian Honeysuckle. A large, broad 
shrub with pink or white flowers in May. In 
July and August it is heavily laden with currant¬ 
like fruit. It is one of the first shrubs to leaf out 
in the spring. A good shrub for screening. 
2 to 3 ft. high. 50 
3 to 4 ft. high. 75 
6 to 7 ft. high. 1 50 
MYRICA carolinensis. Northern Bayberry. You 
probably have admired the rounded masses of 
glossy foliage of the Bayberry, as it embellishes 
the dry hills and sand-dunes of Long Island. 
The gray, wax-covered berries were used by the 
settlers in making candles. Good foliage. Fine 
for dry ground. 
134 to 2 ft. high. Collected.$40 per 100. . 60 
2 to 2 34 ft. high. Collected.$60 per 100. . 75 
234 to 3 ft. high. Collected.$75 per 100. . 1 00 
10 
$4 50 
7 00 
9 00 
10 00 
4 50 
7 00 
4 50 
7 00 
4 50 
7 00 
7 00 
7 00 
4 50 
7 00 
12 50 
5 00 
7 00 
9 00 
Philadelphus • The Mock Orange 
Free-flowering shrubs with showy, mostly fragrant flowers 
which appear in late spring or early summer. Their beauty, 
grace, and fragrance make them well suited for garden and speci¬ 
men planting. We have the old and improved varieties that will 
bring beauty and perfume to your garden. 
PHILADELPHUS, Boule d’Argent. Fountain-like 
habit. Double white flowers transform branches 
into plumes of blossoms. Each 10 
2 to 3 ft. high.$0 50 $4 50 
P. coronarius. Sweet Mock Orange. The big, 
sweet white flowers that you remember. It 
makes a shrub 8 to 10 feet high, gracefully arch¬ 
ing under its border of white flowers in late 
May or early June. 
3 to 4 ft. high. 
5 to 6 ft. high. 
50 
1 00 
4 50 
9 00 
