ASPARAGUS 
Washington—A new rust-resisting variety of excellent quality. Excels all other 
varieties for size, vigor and productiveness. 
Paradise— 
RHUBARB 
CROWN DIVISIONS 
Riverside Giant—Very large and crisp; excellent canner. 
Mammoth—Large, early, tender. Prolific market variety. 
Strawberry—Large, crisp, excellent for canning and pies. 
HORSERADISH 
Horseradish—As a table relish horseradish is without a superior. Easily grown 
and comes into production quickly. 

Twin Falls, Idaho, Oct. 21, 1944. 
Please send me one of your new catalogs. I am very much pleased 
with the things I received from you Iast fall. 
MRS. ORVILLE CREED. 
ORNAMENTAL and 
SHADE TREES 
BIRCH (Betula) 
Two and 3-year old large branched specimen trees. 
Cutleaf Weeping—The old familiar weeping white birch with 
beautiful white bark with black markings and long drooping 
branches and cut foliage. Very desirable and beautiful as a 
specimen shade tree or for street planting. 
European Birch—Erect in growth with silvery bark and slender 
dark brown branches. Quick growing shade tree. 
ELM (UlImus) 
American (U. americana)——80 to 100 feet with drooping, 
spreading branches. 
Hippocastanum—A large tree with a spreading, full, dense head. 
Flowers large, in panicles, white tinged with red. Spring. 

MAPLE (Silverleaf) 

ASPARAGUS 
Chinese (U. pumila) —One of the most rapid growing of all trees. 
Habit dense and compact; leaves much smaller than the Ameri- 
can Elm. Desirable for quick shade and windbreaks. 
HORSECHESTNUT (Aesculus) 
Red Flowering Horsechestnut—Like the common Horsechestnut 
but the flowers bright red. Grafted plants. 
LINDEN (Tilia) 
European (T. europaea) —Upright tree with a dense head. 
Leaves heart-shaped, light green. Flowers very fragrant. Ex- 
cellent shade tree. 
LOCUST (Robinia) 
Black Locust (R. pseudacacia) —Rapid growing. Flowers fragrant 
white, in long drooping racemes. 
MAPLE (Acer) 
Norway (A. platanoides) —A quick shade tree of rapid, compact 
growth. Foliage deep green. 
Schwedler Maple—Like the Norway Maple but the new growth 
and leaves are red in color. 
Silver Maple (A. dasycarpum)—Rapid growing tree with an 
irregular rounded form. Foliage bright green above, silvery 
beneath. 
Red Japanese Laceleaf Maple (A. p. rubrum dissectum)—A 
dwarf weeping tree of great beauty. Leaves have a purplish 
red cast. Grafted. 
(Sorbus) 
MOUNTAIN ASH 
European Mt. Ash—Small, erect tree. Flowers showy, white, fol- 
lowed by heavy clusters of bright red berries during late sum- 
mer. 
OAK (Quercus) 
Scarlet Oak (Q. cocinea) —Leaves finely and sharply cut. Bright 
green changing to brilliant scarlet. 
Red Oak (Quercus rubra)—The best and fastest growing of all 
the oaks. Foliage heavier than the Scarlet Oak. 
POPLAR (Populus) 
Carolina (P. Carolinensis) —Vigorous grower of pyramidal form 
with large pale to deep green glossy leaves. 
Lombardy (P. Nigra Italica) —Of very erect growth habit and 
tallest of poplars. 
TULIP TREE (Liriodendron)—Tall pyramidal tree producing 
large greenish and orange colored flowers during the spring. 
PLANE TREE (Platanus) 
European Sycamore (P. Orientalis) Large grower with round 
topped head, white bark, bright green foliage. 
WILLOW (Salix) 
Babylon Weeping—Very rapid growing green variety most com- 
monly used; fine for shade and lawn. 
Golden Weeping (Niobe)—Same habit as Babylon but has 
beautiful golden bark. 


18 PLANT OUR BUD SELECTED TREES FOR SUCCESS 
