DEUTZIA 
GRA('IL,IS. Slender Deutzia. Pure white 
flowers in June. An excellent shrub for 
edg-ing- a shrub planting and very attractive 
when covered with its crop of bead like 
buds. Not over two feet when fully grown. 
IJeutzia Gracilis 
GKAC'ILIS ROSEA. Has the same habits as 
gracilis but grows slightly taller and is 
covered with deep rose colored flowers. 
LEMOINEI. IMedium large flowers of pure 
white borne in cone shaped heads. Attains 
about four feet in heighth and is useful in 
partial shade. 
3IAGNIFICA. Covered with a mass of pure- 
white bloom in July. The flowers are double 
and erect. This is the prettiest and most 
conspicuous of all the deutzias. 
PRI1>E OF ROCHESTER. Grows bushily and 
slowly and blooms in May before the others. 
The flowers are large, free and double white. 
EUONYMUS 
EFOIVAAIUS ALATUS. Winged Burning Bush. 
Coarse corky winged branches, leaves turn¬ 
ing to crimson in the autumn. Is covered 
with orange colored berries in tan hulls. 
Very attractive as a specimen or in a mass 
planting. 
AMERICANA, (Strawberry bush). Grows to 
about 8 feet. Flowers are few and yellow to 
a reddish green and not very noticeable but 
the berries are very attractive in the autumn 
and winter being a bright pink in a darker 
shell. 
RAHICANS. A low shrub with its branches 
often trailing or climbing, often climbing to 
a heighth of twenty feet or more. The flow¬ 
ers are greenish white and are produced in 
great quantities. A most desirable plant for 
wall covering or ground covering. 
RAHICANS (Var.) Vegeta. A low spreading 
shrub to 5 feet, usually with a few prostrate 
rooting branches at the base, and climbing 
high if planted at the base of a wall. Beayes 
are broad and oval. This is a very attractive 
shrub due to the fruits which appear in 
great quantities and remain on the branches 
a long time. 
ELDER 
GOLDEN LEAVED. Its bright golden yel¬ 
low leaves contrast beautifully with other- 
green leaved shrubs. Covered with clusters 
of shiny black berries in late summer. 
CUT LEAF. Shrub has great clusters of deli¬ 
cate white flowers which are very fi-agi’ant 
in July, followed with black fruit clusters. 
FORSYTHIA 
GOLDEN BELL 
FORTUNEI. Erect and the tallest and most 
slender of all the forsythias. Used for back¬ 
ground planting and is covered with a pro¬ 
fusion of yellow blooms in early spring. 
INTERMEDIA. The earliest bloomer of all 
the forsythias. Long drooping canes make a 
dense background of dark green. A broad 
bushy* plant and a very heavy bloomer. 
SPECTABLIS. A type very similar to inter¬ 
media in growth, but having a much larger 
flower and many more blooms on each plant. 
Sl^SPENSA, Weeping. Slender drooping 
branches strung with yellow flowers and fol¬ 
lowed by many green leaves. May be used 
to good advantage on trellises and along the 
tops of 1 ‘ock walls. Can be planted on banks 
where it is difficult for other plants to 
grow. 
VIRIDISSI3IA. Green stemmed Goldenbells. 
Branches olive green with dark green leaves 
that turn to light green in autumn. This is 
the latest bloomer with the darkest yellow 
flowers. 
FRINGE. PURPLE. Smoke Tree. A spread¬ 
ing shrub or small tree covered with large 
clusters of round leaves, over-hung in sum¬ 
mer by mist-like clouds of tiny flowers. 
These are light lavender when they first 
appear and give the impression of smoke 
from a distance. 
FRINGE, WHITE. A very attractive shrub 
with large leathery leaves, and lace-like 
white flowers borne in gracefully drooping 
clusters. Often tree-like in character but 
usually bushy to the ground, making a well 
rounded bush. 
For.sytliia Forluiiei 
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