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1171—Deutzia Lemoine ® © 
The loveliest of the semi-dwarf Deutzias. The branches spread gracefully and 
are completely covered with close-set sprays of ivory-white flowers in May. 
Grows 3 to 4 feet. 


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A new color in an old favorite family. Bright, sunny-red blooms 
in May and June; and abundant red and orange berries in the 
late summer and fall make this a point of high color all season 
long. Delightfully fragrant. Grows to a height of 8 feet. 
1192——Russian Olive © (Eleagnus Angustifolia) 
Chosen for exceptional beauty as a taller background shrub and for color contrast. 
The gentlest breeze ruffles the leaves, changing the foliage color from gray-green to 
sparkling silvet. Very fragrant, tiny yellow flowers in May are followed by closely 
set clusters of olive-like fruit. As distinctive as it is useful. Grows 8 to 12 feet without 
pruning but can be maintained at any height desired, 
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Pyracantha-Firethorn WILL NOT thrive in cold 
1207—Pyracantha, Fire 
(Cocinea Lalandi) 
A most remarkable semi-evergreen shrub which holds its 



leaves until Christmas in the colder sections. Showy, pomotes) Plant pal in ones around Philadel- 
large trusses of pure white flowers in May are only the phia, Washington, Baltimore, Cincinnati, St. Louis and points south, and along 
prelude for the big show. An abundance ob pralent Atlantic Coast as far north as Massachusetts and in any other territory where 
orange-scarlet berries follow the bloom and the shrub : ; 
becomes a “mound of flame” with the effect lasting until the climate is comparable to the above. 
well into the winter. Grows 4 to 5 feet. 
