SYMPHORICARPOS 
Snowberry. 
VIBURNUMS 
These are among the most popular ornamental shrubs, many assuming 
attractive autumn colors. Their brilliant fruits in autumn and winter afford 
refuge for birds. 
Coralberry, Indian Currant (S. vulgaris). Slender, drooping branches; 
red flowers in summer, followed with a wealth of corabred berries 
which hang on all winter. Does well in dry soil and partial shade. 
3 to 6 feet at maturity. 
Chenault Coralberry. Quite an improvement over the common 
Coralberry of which this is a hybrid. Always a neat appearing plant 
and strikingly handsome when the slender branches are laden with 
the bunches of corabred fruits, which last for most of the winter. 
Snowberry (Racemosus). Slender, medium-growing shrub, does well 
in any soil, under trees and in shady places. Rose'colored flowers in 
June, followed with milky white berries which last until winter. 3 to 4 
feet at maturity. 
TAMARIX (Tamaricaceae) 
A tall growing shrub, with fine feathery foliage; small usually pink 
blossoms during May before leaves appear. Does well in any soil, espe¬ 
cially adapted for the seashore. 
Africana. Reddish brown bark and slender spreading branches; pink 
blossoms in May. 8 to 12 feet at maturity. 
Pentandra (Hispida Aestivalis). 
A superior variety, hardy, 
with a vigorous growth. 
Blooms in July, with numer¬ 
ous bright carmine-pink flow¬ 
ers. 8 to 10 feet at maturity. 
Arrow-Wood (V. dentatum). Of upright habit with dark green, lustrous 
foliage which changes to red and purple in autumn. Flowers are white, 
produced in broad, flat clusters in June, succeeded in autumn by dark blue 
fruits that are greatly admired and liked by birds. Will grow in shade and 
moist locations. 
Common Snowball (V. opulus sterile). A large shrub producing large balls 
of snow-white flowers in May. 8 to 1 0 feet at maturity. 
European Cranberry Bush (V. opulus). Upright spreading habit with dense 
green foliage. The single, flat, white flowers in May are succeeded with 
red cranberry-like berries that cling to the leafless branches all winter. 
8 to 10 feet at maturity. 
Fragrant Viburnum (V. Carlesi). This valuable recent introduction from 
Korea is a dwarf, compact shrub, bearing delicate pale pink blossoms, tinted 
with white, with clover-scented fragrance. 3 to 4 feet at maturity. 
Wayfaring Tree (V. lantana). Robust growing, with large leaves that are 
silvery underneath. White flowers in May and June, red fruits that turn 
purple-black in autumn. 12 to 1? feet at maturity. 
WEIGELA (Diervilla) 
These shrubs make a strong, up¬ 
right, spreading growth. The flow¬ 
ers are wide trumpet-shaped, borne 
in clusters thickly along the branch¬ 
es. The different varieties are from 
white to red in colors. The flowers 
form on the old growth and the Weigela Rosea, 
bushes should not be pruned before 
they bloom in spring. 
Abel Carriere. One of the finest hybrid Weigelas. The rose-carmine 
flowers, with yellow spots in the throat, appear in June and July. 
5 to 6 feet at maturity. 
Candida. A fine white variety, flowering in June and throughout the 
summer. 5 to 6 feet at maturity. 
Eva Rathke. One of the most attractive varieties of medium height, 
with graceful spreading habit; foliage bronze-green; flowers of bril¬ 
liant crimson. 3 to ? feet at maturity. 
Floribunda. The crimson Weigela; its flowers large and showy, crowded 
at ends of short branchlets. 5 to 6 feet at maturity. 
Rosea. A vigorous, dense, erect growth, covered with an abundance of 
large, rosy pink flowers. This is one of the most popular varieties. 
5 to 6 feet at maturity. 
European Cranberry Bush. 
WITCH-HAZEL (Hamamelis) 
(H. virginiana). A tenacious common coarse bush, very attractive 
for its late autumn bloom. 
10 
MILTON NURSERY CO., MILTON, OREGON 
