SHRUBS 
Shrubs form the background for your garden. They 
give it an air of quiet seclusion and turn it into an intimate 
outdoor living room carpeted with grass and furnished with 
bloom. Many are the shrubs from which to choose, from 
those whose flowers add a wealth of fragrance and color 
to the spring garden to those whose leaves turn deep yel- 
low, flaming scarlet, warm purple, or wine-red in the fall. 
In addition to the varieties most commonly grown 
there are many others less well known but no more expen- 
sive and equally as desirable. Included among these are 
native types such as the witch-hazels, dogwoods, shadblows 
and winterberries—shrubs of consistent merit throughout 
the year. 
ACANTHOPANAX PENTAPHYLLUM 
Five leaf aralia; excellent for screen planting, dark green leaves 
which remain on stem late in fall. 
Desirable for city planting. 
SAI E NIGH pone o Ac~ te ee erase Ne ee oh hae ade ee each $ .50 
APS {tt Nig Nee le Ge en Bee oe OR each $ .60 
BARBERRY (Berberis) 
Frequently used for hedges the barberries are just as desirable 
as low shrubs. 
Berberis thunbergi (Japanese barberry) 
Needs no introduction. Appreciated for its red berries and 
colorful foliage in the fall. 
12/18 (in hight. RaChaoe2 ora per doz.cens $2.50 
18/24 in. high .......... each Suna 0 Ape perodozf.i.cu.. 3.00 
24/30 in. high .......... Cache ge) ike, PCr GOR cn) heusate: 3.50 
Berberis thunbergi atropurpurea (Red leaved barberry) 
A popular variety with bright red leaves. 
LOTT Bin ebig ieee eee ge ck a ee ee each $ .35 
PS/240 in highis sccre kts ocd ee each _—-.40 
ZA/ SO -inze big beste 5 Bice le conc. ve ashi sanbes wa eR each .50 
