INDIANAPOLIS, IND. 
EVERGREEN SHRUBS AND VINES 
PACHYSANDRA TERMINALIS 12 in. 
Japanese Spurge 
Toothed evergreen leaves. White flowers in 
May. Good in shady places. 
Each Per 10 Per 100 
2 yr.$ .25 $2.00 $15.00 
PYRACANTHA COCCINEA LALANDI 6-8 ft. 
A small, picturesque, thorny shrub with box¬ 
like evergreen foliage. Especially fine orange 
scarlet berries in fall and winter. Needs shel¬ 
tered location. Easily trained on walls, excel¬ 
lent in rock gardens, or as a low ornamental 
hedge. 
1 ft. . .$ 1.00 
2 ft. 2.50 
:i ft. 5.oo 
4 ft. 7.50 
Mahonia Aquifolia 
RHODODENDRON CAROLIN1ANUM 4-6 ft. 
Carolina Rhododendron 
Rather dwarf. Glossy green leaves with rose- 
pink flowers in May or June. B&B. 
IVj ft. .$ 3.00 
2 ft. 4.00 
R. Maximum 15 ft. Rosebay Rhododendron 
Largest of all Rhododendron. Green all year 
around. White to delicate pink flowers in late 
June and July. Plant in semi-shade and not in 
full sun. B&B. Hardy. 
2 ft.$ 3.00 
U ft.. 4.00 
VIBURNUM RHYTIDOPHYLLUM 6-8 ft. 
Leatlicrleaf Viburnum 
Hardy shrub with oblong deep green leaves. 
White flowers in Spring followed by masses of 
deep red berries. B&B. 
1 ft. .$ 1.00 
1 Vi ft. . 1.50 
VINCA MINOR Periwinkle or Myrtle 
Trailing evergreen. Lilac-blue flowers. Good 
for vases and baskets. 
Each Per 10 Per 100 
3 yr_ $ .20 $1.50 $10.00 
YUCCA FILAMENTOSA 6 ft. Adams Needle 
Leaves to 2 % feet long and 1 inch wide. Tall 
spikes of creamy-white flowers in June and 
July. 
2 yr... .$ 1.00 
GROUND COVERS AND THEIR USES 
Each year the average home owner finds more and more uses for vines and ground 
covers. They are no longer recognized as a special plant having a very definite place, but 
as a group having broad uses. No longer are they used only to climb in some unkempt 
fashion over a trellis or masonry wall which we are really trying to hide, or as a substitute 
for grass on a shaded or steep slope. True, these uses remain, but in addition they are now 
recognized as excellent material for forming low edgings for terraces, shrub plantings, 
flower beds, foundation plantings, or planted in masses for a “panel design effect.’’ 
We heartily recommend your adoption of vines and ground covers to solve the above 
mentioned problems, from experience in the past, we know they will prove completely 
satisfactory. 
Nursery Stock—A Gift That Grows 
13 
