
HELIANTHEMUM LASIANTHUM 
See page 23 
ANISE FRAGRANCE 
Illicium anisatum. Those of you who like to try out new 
plants should be interested in this fragrant foliaged beauty. 
Leathery deep green heavily veined leaves, often 3 inches in 
length, cover the plant thickly and maintain an aristocratic 
appearance through all seasons. Clusters of buttercup yellow 
flowers, with mild sweet fragrance, are an added attraction 
in late winter. Hardy. Shade or part shade. 6-8 ft. 
containers, $2.25; gal. containers, 75c. 
boll 
BLUE TRUMPETS 
Iochroma lanceolatum. With this shrub in your garden 
you may enjoy, the whole year through, satisfying quantities 
of slender glistening blue trumpets. Forms a tall informal 
plant handsomely clothed with luscious satiny green foliage. 
Grows rapidly. Hardy. 1 LE 
Sun. Gal. containers, 60c. 
SWEET SPIRE 
Itea ilicifolia. Holly-leaved Sweet Spire. Has everything 
that English Holly has, except the berries, and other excel- 
lent qualities as well—dense glistening deeply-toothed foliage 
that rises on arching red branches well above the body of 
the plant, grace and symmetry in every line. Cut sprays for 
indoor decorating hold up amazingly well. We endorse this 
shrub, heartily. Sun or part shade. Hardy. 5-7. ft. Balled, 
bushy 3-4 ft. $2.75; 2'%4-3 ft. $2.00; 5-gal. containers, SIE7 55 
gal. containers, 60c, 
MAID OF ORLEANS 
Jasmine Maid of Orleans. A grand new bushy shrub for 
warm sunny locations that combines attractive wavy heavily 
veined foliage and protuse 8-petalled white flowers that are 
deliciously fragrant—not with an overpowering gardenia fra- 
grance but with a smooth, sweet permeating perfume. It is 
one of those delightful plants you smell before you see and 
are not satisfied until you have discovered it. Evergreen and 
hardy except in very cold locations. 3 ft. 5-gal. containers, 
$2.25; gal. containers, 85ce. See illustration, page 25. 
CHEERFUL LANTANAS 
Lantanas will produce more color per square inch than 
any other shrub we know and keep it up though almost the 
whole year. Plant them in the sun and don’t pet them too 
much, They seem to thrive on neglect. Hardy except in very 
cold areas and if frozen to the ground they are usually back 
on the job again ‘n a very short time. 
Gal. containers, 35c. 
LANTANA Camara. 
Dwarf Orange. 4 ft. 
Dwarf Pink. Very compact. 
Dwarf Yellow. 2-3 ft. 
Dwarf White. 2-3 ft. 
Lantana sellowiana. Trailing Lantana. For covering banks, 
low walls or parkings. Covers rapidly and thoroughly. Sun. 
Gal. containers, 35c; flats of 100 plants, $2.80. 
Zak t, 
DOUBLE FLOWERED TEA TREE 
Leptospermum scoparium Double Pink. A pocket edi- 
tion of the taller variety that covers its dainty soft foliaged 
branches in spring with the sweetest little double pink flow- 
ers you have ever seen. As the plant only grows: to 3 or 4 
feet it is just the right size to tuck in any small sunny spot 
in the garden. Hardy. 5-gal. containers, $1.75; gal. con- 
tainers, 60c. See illustration, page 15. 
TEAS WAXLEAF 
Ligustrum japonicum, Wax Leaf. We have maintained 
for years that this is our most valuable foliage shrub. 
Through burning heat, freezing cold or violent winds our 
good friend always looks neat and presentable. Polished 
deep-green leaves about 2 inches in length form a dense mass 
of cool foliage that is always at its best. If allowed to grow 
unpruned the plant attains a height of 8 to 10 feet, with 
approximately the same spread, and is well furnished right 
down to the ground. Trimmed, the plant may be kept under 
a 4-ft. window and grown as a hardy hedge, we assure you 
there is no plant of greater virtue. It feels equally at home 
in sun or shade. Balled, bushy 2-3 ft., $1.85; 5-gal. contain- 
ets, dio) Sake containers, 50c: 
Ligustrum lucidum. Japanese Privet. Large, leathery 
leaves and white flowers. Unequaled for a fast growing, 
drought resistant hedge. 10-12 ft. Sun or part shade. Hardy. 
5-gal. containers, $1.75; gal. containers, 40c; flats of about 
100 plants, $2.80. 
LOROPETALUM 
Loropetalum chinense. If you were to draw a 3-ft. circle 
and plant one of these beauties in the center it would prob- 
ably fill out the circle as perfectly as if it had been tailored 
to order. Grows compactly to 3 ft. tall and in early spring 
is smothered with downy white flowers that attract atten- 
tion in any company. Hardy. Enjoys sun. 5-gal. containers, 
$1.75; gal. containers, 75c. 
OREGON GRAPE 
Mahonia Aquifolium. Dark glossy substantial leaves that 
are deeply toothed like the English Holly. Chilly winter 
nights change many of the leaves to shades of yellow and 
scarlet, producing a quite astonishing color arrangement. 
Sunflower-yellow, pea-shaped flowers arrive with the spring. 
Prune back long branches about two-thirds their length each 
winter. By so doing the plant will be kept compact and 
should be attractive at all times, Either sun or shade and 
plenty of moisture. 2-4 ft. Hardy. 5-gal. containers, $1.75; 
gal, containers, 50c. 
Mahonia compacta. Dwarf Oregon Grape. Exactly like 
the preceding variety except that it grows naturally compact 
to 2% ft. and requires no pruning. Balled, bushy, 15-18 in., 
$1.85; 5-gal. containers, $1.75; gal. containers, 50c. 

24 TUTTLE BROS. NURSERIES, PASADENA, CALIFORNIA 
