1939 
105 
S0W • SALZER’S • SEEDS- 
TRUEHEDGE COLUMNBERRY 
U. S. Plant Patent No. 110 
A' sensational form of Berberis Thunbergii that you 
will want, either as an individual shrub alongside the 
porch, as a group of several in your front lawn, or that 
you will want as a hedge! 
In either case, Truehedge Columnberry grows so per¬ 
fectly upright ami s«» heaiitifiilly pyramidal in shape, that 
iiiiieh less time is necMied to aeunirc a hedge three feet 
high, or an individual plant, than was formerly the eas<‘. 
Note its shapely upright growth, in the illustration. If 
you need a row of shruhs along a driveway, alitng a walk, 
along your hoiiiidary line, or to replace a fence or if yosi 
want to replace your present he<lge, plant Truehedge Col- 
uinnherry! Set the plants 15 indies apart. 
WM t;UARAlVTEE that it will create a hedge, no mat¬ 
ter wliat height is desired, quicker than Japanese Bar¬ 
berry twice as large! No matter what size Columnberry 
you order, you have an immediate row of hedge plants, 
Truehedge because of its upright growth. It is perfectly haidy, 
Coluninherrv withstanding 30 degrees below zero. 
Buddleia, Pink Charming 
Truehedge Columnberry has won¬ 
derfully dense and heavy foliage, with 
glossy, healthy leaves a deep shade 
of green. The foliage is distrihuted 
evenly and densely starling right at 
the ground. 
It is covered with brilliant red ber¬ 
ries in the fall of the year and the 
foliage turns to showy scarlet, cre¬ 
ating a beautiful effect. The berries 
persist on the plant until far into win¬ 
ter. 
THE NEW BUDDLEIA 
PINK CHARMING 
Much used by florists in baskets of 
cut flowers, and now available for 
your own yard! Pink Char m i n g 
makes a beautiful bushy plant, 5 to 
6 feet high, flowering from the' mid¬ 
dle of June on. The llowers are a 
clear pink to lavender pink, an en¬ 
tirely new color in Buddleia. 
This new and novel color is not 
found in any other Buddleia in culti¬ 
vation today! Planted with the other 
varieties, it contrasts beautifully. 
Pink Charming is really something 
very much worth while. Strong 
plant.s: Each, 65e; 3 for $1.75. Field 
Grown root.s: Each, $1.00. 
Chinese Beautyherry 
CHINESE BEAUTYBERRY 
Calliearpa. A very pretty shrub, 
about 5 feet high, covered during 
August with clusters of pink flowers 
which are followed by bunches of 
purple berries. It is well to protect 
this over winter. Sometimes the tops 
freeze, but the young shoots come 
forth quickly the next season. Each, 
iyz-2 ft., 49e; 3 for .$1.40. 
Price of Truehedge 
Plants, 2 yr. old, 9 to 12 
inches high: Each, .30e; 3 for 
84o; 0 for ,$1..>0; do/.., $3.7.5; 25 
for .$5.00; 100 for $18.00. 
Plants, 3 yr. old, 1% to 2 ft. 
high: Each, OOe; 3 for .$1.50; 
6 for $2.70*; do/., $5.15; 2.5 for 
$0.75; 100 for $30.00. 
Sheared Three Year Old Truehedge on Our 
Farms. It Msikes a Fine lle«lge! 
DEUTZIA 
They flower in June, bearing dainty 
bell or tassel-shaped flowers. 
—Slender Deut/ia. A beautiful dwarf 
shrub of slender, erect, branching hab¬ 
it, covered in early spring with rose 
colored flowers, 4 ft. Valuable fol¬ 
low hedges and for foundation plant¬ 
ing. Each, 12 to 15 in., 43e; 3 for 
$1.15. 
—Pride of Rochester. Large, double 
flowers, white tinged with blush. 
Grows 5 to 6 feet high. Blooms in 
May. Each, ly. to 2 ft., 39e; 3 for $1.05. 
Deut/ia, Pride of R<»ehester 
DOGWOOD (Cornus) 
Grow readily almost anywhere but 
especially valuable in shady locations. 
All of them are very desirable. 
—Golden Twig Dogwood. 5 ft. Bright 
golden yellow bark, strong broad¬ 
leaved foliage, white flowers in May 
and June. Each, 12 to 18 in., 43c; 
3 for ,$1.20. 
—Red Osier Dogw-ood. 7 ft. Valuable 
for its brilliant bark, which is usually 
dark blood red; white flowers in May 
and June. Elegant for corners and 
rear planting-. Bach, 1% to 2 ft., 30c; 
3 for $1.05. 
—Silver Blotch Dogwood. 5 ft. A 
striking shrub with variegated cream 
and green foliage, and bright, dark 
red bark. White flowers. Each, 114 
to 2 ft., 09c; 3 for $1.95. All shrubs 
are postpaid. 
Silver Blotch Dogwood 
CORAL BERRY OR INDIAN CURRANT 
Low growing, spreading bushes of graceful habit, bearing small, rose 
pink flowers in summer, followed by small red berries which cluster in 
thick ropes along the slender branches, and which remain until far into 
the winter. Valuable for shady locations. 3 to 5 feet. Each, lJa-2 ft.. 
Coral Berry or Indian Currant 
33c; 3 for 90c. 
Your Beauty Bush has been the talk of the town, and bloome d beautifully. I took )^»th 
Flower Show.—Mrs. Anson Brackett, 1945 Wilson St., Selma, California. 
the flowers at our 
