Two Bruit-B CWUNG Shriuls that are Alua Highly Onuamental 
Not Prepaid 
The HIGH BUSH CRANBERRY is a large growing shrub 
resembling the bush of the Snowball. 
beautiful large ornamental shrub. 
In fact, it makes a very 
HIGHBUSH CRANBERRY 
The High Bush Cranberry is native all over the wooded sections of 
Northern Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota. Thousands of bushels 
of fruit are gathered each fall and made into jelly. 
There is a great variation in the size of the fruit. Some bushes bear 
fruits twice as large as that of others. Our bushes are grown from fruit 
selected from bushes growing the very largest berries we could find. 
The berries are not good to pick and eat from the bush. They are dis- 
appointing if they are bought with such an idea in mind, but they are 
fine for culinary purposes and make a jelly that looks and tastes exactly 
like that of the marsh Cranberry, such as you buy at the grocery. It is 
for the jelly that this fruit is used. 
Nice to plant as individual shrubs, either in clusters or in long rows 
as a background. Grows to a height of 8 to 12 feet. Old bushes will 
often bear a bushel of fruit in a single year. If planted on the farm 
where there is plenty of room, nothing else is nicer than a full row of 
High Bush Cranberry planted along the north side of the garden, where 
it will produce loads of fruit and at the same time act as a dense low 
windbreak for the garden. So planted, bushes should be set 6 feet apart. 
2 to 3 ft., $1.00; 3 for $2.50; 10 for $7.50 
Juneberry 

JUNEBERRY 
The Juneberry resembles in every way the Blueberry. Looks like the 
Blueberry, tastes like it, and makes pies and sauce like it. But you can 
cultivate and grow the Juneberry right in the garden, with just the ordi- 
nary cultivation as given other shrubs, while you cannot grow the Blue- 
berry without going to considerable trouble. To grow the Blueberry, 
it is necessary to prepare an acid soil in which to plant them. Juneberry 
grows native in northern Michigan and clear across Wisconsin, Minne- 
sota, North Dakota, and far into Montana. It grows in almost any good 
garden soil. 
The Juneberry is also a beautiful shrub to have for early blooming 
in big clumps in the border where it will bloom and bear fruit. The 
Juneberry is a very easy shrub to grow, as it adapts itself to almost every 
soil and all sorts of moisture conditions. It is extremely hardy and is to 
be found growing wild in its different species from northern Michigan 
to Montana. Plant a dozen plants 4 feet apart; in a few years they will 
spread together and bear quantities of delicious fruit each year for many 
years. Strong 2- to 3-ft. bushes, 3 for $2.50; 10 for $9.50, not prepaid 
CARYOPTERIS, BLUE MIST (Hardy Blue Spirea) 
We have plenty of blooming shrubs during the early season 
through late May, June and July. But when fall comes, as a 
rule, the shrubs are bare of bloom. 
So it seems nice to find a late blooming shrub hardy enough 
to stand our northern climate. This we have in Hardy Cary- 
opteris which has proved hardy to the Canadian line. 
A low growing perfectly rounded shrub that reaches a height 
of about 2 feet. Covered through August until killing frost 
with delicate lacelike blue flowers. 
Nice 12- to 18-inch plants: $1.25 each; 2 for $2.25. 

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