Nurserymen Since 1890 
For BEAUTY and PERMANENCY 
LANDSCAPE WITH 
SHRUBS 
Kolkwitzia Amabilis 
Philadelphia Hybrids 
Enchantment. A small shrub, 3'6 feet high. 
Long erect branches are furnished with 
thick panicles of double white flowers, most 
striking in appearance. 18-24 in., 35c; 2-3 
ft., 50c each. 
Virginal. A choice variety growing rather 
compactly, 6'8 feet high. Its flowers are 
large, often 2 inches across, slightly fra' 
grant, double or semi'double, and come in 
such profusion that the branches are 
weighted down with their snowy whiteness. 
18-24 in., 35c; 2-3 ft., 50c. 
PRUNUS glandulosa (Flowering Almond). 
See pages 12 and 13. 
RHODOTYPOS kerrioides (Jetbead). 5 
feet. A neat, dark green shrub with 
white flowers in May and June. Shiny 
black berries, which last all winter, follow. 
This shrub is hardy and excellent to plant 
in shady places. 12-18 in., 25c; 18-24 in., 
35c each. 
LONICERA (Bush Honeysuckle). 
L. korolkowi floribunda. A shower bouquet of dainty 
pink flowers and misty blue'gray leaves. Red fruits 
follow. This makes a very unusual and handsome 
shrub. 18-24 in., 35c; 2-3 ft., 50c; 3-4 ft., 60c each. 
L. maacki. A tall, spreading shrub. Strikingly hand' 
some in summer and fall with bright red berries and 
dark green leaves. White flowers in June. 18-24 in., 
35c; 2-3 ft., 50c; 3-4 ft., 60c each. 
L. morrowi. 8 ft. A billowy shrub, broader than high, 
low and densely bushy. Creamy yellow flowers in 
July, which are followed by red berries. 2-3 ft., 35c 
each. 
L. tatarica. Bushy and tall. Flowers in June. Red and 
orange currant'like fruits in summer. 2-3 ft., 35c; 
3-4 ft., 50c each. 
PHILADELPHUS. In the old New England gardens, 
a century or more ago, Mock Orange was one of the 
shrubs most often found. It was cherished, and 
rightly so. Indeed, there are few shrubs today that 
can surpass the Mock Orange for intense fragrance, abundance 
of bloom, hardiness, ease of culture, and fine green foliage not 
troubled by insects or diseases. 
P. coronarius (Sweet Mock Orange). 10 ft. The old'fashioned 
Mock Orange with creamy white flowers in May and June. Be' 
cause of the fragrance, its flowers are aptly called the orange 
blossoms of the North. 18-24 in., 25c; 2-3 ft., 35c; 3-4 ft., 50c 
each. 
PHILADELPHUS hybrids, originated by Lemoine of France, 
are slender branched, graceful shrubs. They are comparatively 
new and too rarely seen. 
Avalanche. Graceful shrub with a profusion of creamy white 
flowers in June. Mature height 5 feet. 2-3 ft., 50c; 3-4 ft., 
60c each. 
Bouquet Blanc. A small bush, 3'6 feet high, of dense habit. The 
snowy flowers are of medium size and are borne in large 
clusters. 12-18 in., 25c; 18-24 in., 35c each. 
Lomcera Tatanca 
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