Malus atrosanguinea (Carmine crabapple) 
Twigs covered in May with brilliant, unfading, carmine blos- 
soms. Fruits red. Wide-spreading branches. Eventual height 
twenty feet or more. 
Malus baccata mandshurica (Siberian crabapple) 
This is the fragrant variety of the Siberian crabapple. A round 
headed tree that grows to thirty feet. Flowers white. Fruits red 
or yellow. 
Malus coronaria (Wild sweet crabapple) 
In maturity a stiff-branched, thirty foot tree. Flowers rose fad- 
ing white and fragrant. A native variety invaluable for naturalis- 
tic plantings. 
Malus floribunda (Showy crabapple) 
Buds pink. Flowers wide open and white. Fruits yellow or 
red. A wide-spreading tree of medium height, usually about 
twenty feet. 
Malus hopa (Hopa crabapple) 
A very attractive variety of strong upright growth, bears a pro- 
fusion of very large rose-red flowers followed by large red 
fleshed, edible fruit. 
Malus ioensis (Prairie crabapple) 
Grows to thirty feet. Wide, spreading branches. Flowers white 
and pink-tinted. Native to the middle west and in many respects 
the finest of them all. (Illustrated at the beginning of this 
section). 
Malus ioensis plena (Bechtel’s crabapple) 
Flowers soft pink; look like roses and smell like violets. Fruits 
greenish and waxy. Branches horizontal. Height twenty-five feet 
or more. Double-flowered form of the Prairie crabapple. 
3/4 fe: high 21. each $1.25 A/S high 2 each 1.75 
D/O Steiger nde ed Ene ene each 2.50 
Clumped 
White Birch 
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