SHRUBS 
Shrubs form the  back- 
ground for your garden. 
They give it an air of quiet 
seclusion and turn it into an 
intimate outdoor living room 
carpeted with grass and fur- 
nished with bloom. 

In addition to the varieties 
most commonly grown there Beauty Bush 
are many others less well 
known but no more expensive 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. 
SY Aen ae ANY 4 be ae Plan a aia 6g EE OR OL Te each $ .50 
A radu Ig Np ee eee ae Oe ee We each $ .60 
SHADBLOW (Amelanchier canadensis) 
A tall-growing native shrub covered with white blooms in April 
and May. Makes a handsome specimen. 
MV SL rau heed eV tod ce ce Ei gee OMe EN Sats oO oe each $ .40 
PARAS ERM OVE d 0 lomtigeate. dee tees Pen ots AE Ree ea aa bes Wa i each ~—_—-.60 
CHOKEBERRY (Aronia) 
Native shrubs of unusual merit that are particularly effective 
when combined with hawthorns or evergreens. 
Aronia arbutifolia (Red Chokeberry) 
Red leaved and red berried in the fall. Under eight feet high. 
Prefers a moist location. 
2/2-4t- high well: branched ‘bushes .2:.422...:.- 25. each $ .60 
3/49tt. high ‘well branched” bushes* 2.2 ne each = .75 
Aronia melanocarpo (Black chokeberry) 
Lower growing. Bears black fruit. (Illustrated at the beginning 
of this section). 
MEME | aed V4 a Vet ad aaa Meme MROMERE eh ya Zn tein SO each $ .60 
BW i Oa Aa ANCE OS Sec ie a Raed aR AE Ra te Ae each) = .75 
