22 Hardy Ornamental Shrubs 
The STORRS £r HARRISON CO. 
Golden Mock Orange 
Honeysuckle Grandiflora Rosea 
Flowers of Beauty Bush 
BUSH HONYSUCKLE (LONICERA) 
Pragrantissima (Winter Honeysuckle). Compact, good 
grower. Early pink and white fragrant flowers ; oval winter 
foliage, if sheltered. 
Grandiflora Rosea. Rose-pink flowers ; red fruits. 
Morrowi (Japanese Bush Honeysuckle). A rounded bush, 
compact. Creamy white flowers : later, crimson fruits. 
Three above: 2 to 3 feet, 50c; 3 for $1.35. 3 to 4 feet, 65c. 
Korolkowi (Blue Leaf Honeysuckle). Small, narrow, but 
numerous bluish green leaves on slender arching stems. 
The flowers are light coral-pink followed by red fruits. 
1% to 2 feet, 60c. 2 to 3 feet, 75c. 
HYDRANGEA 
Massive, white, long-season bloom. If severely pruned every 
spring before the leaf buds open, will get to be very dense, 
stocky, wonderfully attractive clumps 2% to 4 feet. 
Arborescens grandiflora (“Hills of Snow”). The flowers 
are Snowball shape, pure white. July-August. Rounded 
leaves and compact bush. |Each[ 3 ] 6 
1 y 2 to feet .|$0.60|$1.60|$3.00 
2 to 3 feet .| .80| 2.20| 4.00 
Paniculata grandiflora (“Peegee”). Immense acorn-shape 
cones. White, then pink, then reddish bronze and green. 
August-November. |Each| 3 | 6 
lVo to 2 feet .|$0.501$1.351$2.50 
2 to 3 feet .. i .70| 1.901 3-50 
LILACS [Syringa] 
Josikaea (Hungarian Lilac). Stout erect growth, dark shin¬ 
ing leaves, and purple flowers in June. 
Persian Purple. Medium growing with slender branches and 
narrow leaves ; a choice foundation shrub ; pink-purple. 
Villoea. Dwarf growth ; broad leaved ; pinkish lilac flowers 
in long loose panicles ; latest to bloom. 
Vulgaris, White. Slender ; fragrant white flowers. 
Four kinds above: 2 to 3 feet, 60c. 3 to 4 feet, 80c. 
Vulgaris, Purple. Popular; good grower, free blooming, 
purple. 2 to 3 feet, 35c ; 6 for $1.80. 3 to 4 feet, 50c. 
French Named Lilacs 
General Price 
1^4 to 2 feet 
Perfected flower types, in form, 
color and size. Bush shaped. 
2 
3 
to 3 feet 
to 4 feet 
Each| 3 
$0.80|$2.25 
l.ool 2.75 
1.25| 3.50 
—Alphonse Lavallee (D). Broad panicles, violet-blue. 
—Belle de Nancy (D). Great panicles of satiny rose-white. 
—Charles X (S)* Clusters of lilac flowers, slightly violet. 
—La Tour d’Auvergne (D). Large, violet-purple. 
—Marie Legraye (S). Pure white. 
—Michel Buchner (D). Dwarf and stocky; pale lilac. 
—Mme. Abel Chatenay (B). Beautiful globular buds like 
Lily-of-the-Valley, reluctantly opening up; snow white. 
—Negro. Single ; heavy violet overcast with wine-red. 
—Obelisque (D). Full, compact clusters; pure white. 
—President Grevy (D). Rosy mauve and blue. 
—Reaumur (S). Satiny rose-carmine. 
—Souv. de Ludwig Spaeth (S). Reddish purple. 
—Viviand-Morel (D). Intermingled blue and white petals, 
reverse deep purplish rose. 
KOLKWITZIA 
Amabilis. A charming new shrub from China, the cen¬ 
ter upright, the outer branches gracefully arching with at¬ 
tractive leaves. The beautiful flowers appear in profusion 
during June, in pairs which cluster into cymes of about 
twenty-five; bell-shaped and somewhat lipped, pale pink 
with orange veins in the throat, the buds much darker. 
1V> to 2 feet, 75c; 3 for $2.00. 2 to 3 feet, 90c; 3 for $2.40. 
PHILADELPHUS [Mockorange] 
One of the best shrubs, the taller growing sorts largely used 
for hedges. The flowers are very profuse, similar to straw¬ 
berry blossoms but larger, white with usual creamy tinge and 
prominent yellow stamens ; mostly fragrant. 
Aureus (Golden Syringa). Valuable for contrastive group¬ 
ing, the best medium golden leaved shrub. 
15 to 18 in., 50c. 18 to 24 in., 60c. 24 to 30 in., 75c. 
Bouquet Blanc. Magnificent full, fragrant sprays of double 
white ; best variety for a hedge like Spirea Van Houtte. 
Each 6 1 25 
1% to 2 feet ."|$0.40|$2.25|$ 7.50 
2 ' to 3 feet .| .55| 3.00| 10.00 
Glacier. The flowers are double, snow white, produced in 
thick clusters of eight or more, giving the effect of one 
enormous double flower. Medium. 2 to 3 feet, 50c. 
Ophelia. Very fragrant, crinkly, mostly double flowers ; flesh- 
white with white gold stamens. Medium height. 
1(4 to 2 feet, 40c. 2 to 3 feet, 50c. 
Virginal The bush grows moderately tall, with good foli- 
— age and compact habit. The flowers are the larg¬ 
est, handsomest, most sweetly fragrant, and with longest 
blooming season, of any known variety. 
Each 
6 -I 
25 
1 (A to 2 feet . 
$0.45 
.65 
82 50IS 9 00 
2 to 3 feet. . 
3.501 
4.501 
12.50 
17.50 
3 to 4 feet . 
.85 
PRIVET [Ligustrum] 
Of dense compact habit; useful in shaded places. To plant 
a single row, set them 6, 8 or 12 inches apart; for a double 
row, about 18 inches apart each way and alternately. Cut 
them back severely when planting. 
Amoor River (L. amurense). A hardy northern grown type, 
vigorously upright and tall growing. The leaves are dark. 
I 12 I 100 I 1000 
12 to 18 inches 
18 to 24 inches 
$1.30 
1.70 
$7.50|$60.00 
10.50| 85.00 
California (L. ovalifolium). Quick growing, straight, densely 
clothed shoots ; the foliage in precise arrangement, a dark 
shiny green ; most used where hardy. | 12 [ 100 | 1000 
12 to 18 inches 
18 to 24 inches 
$0.90 $4.50|$35.00 
1.25 7.001 50.00 
Ibolium. A hybrid of Ibota and Ovalifolium, with lustrous 
foliage; remarkably sturdy and cold-resistant. Replaces 
Ovalifolium in general use. | 12 | 100 | 1000 
12 to 18 inches 
18 to 24 inches 
2 to 3 feet . . 
$ 1.20 
1.55 
2.05 
( 7.00|$55.00 
9.501 75.00 
13.001100.00 
Japanese (L. ibota). Makes up into striking tall clumps, 
or informal screening hedges, with widespread curving 
branches ; grayish green. 
12 
100 | 1000 
12 to 18 inches . 
$1.85 
2.45 
$12.50|$110.00 
17.001 150.00 
18 to 24 inches . 
See Colored Back Cover—for Illustration of Hydrangea, Lilacs, and Mockorange 
