Edward Gillett, Southwick, Mass. — Shrubs and Trees 75 
DIRCA palustris (Moosewood; Leatherwood). Shrub 2 to 5 feet high. Flowers light yel¬ 
low, preceding the leaves. 25 cts. each. S2.00 per doz. XX, 50 cts. each. 
DIERVILLA trifida (Bush Honeysuckle). A little low shrub, with pale yellow flowers and 
ovate-pointed leaves. Clumps, 25 cts. each, S2.00 per doz. 
FORSYTHIA suspensa (Weeping Golden Bell). A beautiful shrub, with drooping branches. 
Flowers yellow; quite showy. 25 cts. each, $2.00 per doz. 
F. viridissima. Flowers light yellow, in great abundance along the branches. 25 cts. each, 
.$2.00 per doz. 
GAYLUSSACIA frondosa (Dangleberry). A handsome shrub about 3 feet high, with 
striped bark and rather small green leaves. The flowers are greenish white, borne on 
long stems, followed by the large, delicious blue berries. Easily grown in moist soils. 
25 cts. each. 
G. resinosa (Black Huckleberry), The common Huckleberry of our woods. 
Very sweet fruit. Grows about 2 feet high. 25 cts. each, $2.00 per doz. 
HAMAMELIS Virginica (Witch-Hazel). A tall shrub with oval or obovate leaves. It 
flowers in autumn about the time the leaves begin to fall and matures its fruit the next 
season. 25 cts. each, $2.00 per doz. 
HYDRANGEA arborescens (Wild Hydrangea). The earliest of this genus to flower. A 
vigorous shrub 4 feet high, with flat cymes of yellow-white flowers. 25 cts. each, $2.00 
per doz. 
H. radiata. A thrifty shrub from the southern Allegheny mountains, with white flowers 
similar to the above. The leaves are large, dark green on the upper surface, and woolly 
w*hite on the lower side. The beauty is disclosed with every breeze, by turning a leaf 
here and there, and showing the woolly white against the background of dark green. 
Hardy. Forms good clumps. 25 cts. each, $2.00 per doz. 
A planting of rhodotiendrons in woods 
