CUTTING’S 

SYRINGA OR MOCK ORANGE 
GRANDIFLORA— 
An upright, rapid growing shrub, well 
adapted for background planting. Has 
large single white flowers in June. 
3-4 ft., 75¢; 4-5 ft., $1.00. 
LEMOINE— 
A showy, free blooming variety with 
slender twiggy and_ slightly arching 
branches. Flowers are creamy white, 
fragrant, smaller in size than most of 
the varieties but because of their profuse 
blooming habit are most effective at 
blossom time. 2-3 ft., 75¢; 3-4 ft., $1.00. 
VIRGINAL— 
One of the finest of the improved mock 
oranges. Flowers are very large with 
large petals and double crested. Usually 
borne in clusters of 5 to 7. Sweet scented 
and long blooming. We consider this to 
be one of the very best blooming shrubs 
we can grow in Minnesota. Will bloom 
the first season. 2-3 ft, 75¢; 3-4 ft., 
$1.00. 
“MINNESOTA SNOWFLAKE” 
New Double Flowering 
Mock Orange 
Originator’s description— “This new 
Double Mock Orange is truly outstanding. 
It is all double, every blossom intensely 
double, exceptionally sweet scented, 
glistening white, large flowering, profuse 
bloomer, symmetrically formed, graceful- 
ly branched, neat, beautiful foliage, 
rugged, fast growing, and exceptionally 
hardy.” 3-4 ft., $1.50 each. 
COMMON SNOWBALL 
Handsome white flowers are produced 
in great globular clusters. Has long been 
one of the most popular and showy 
varieties on our lists. 2-3 ft., $1.00. 
NINEBARK 
DWARF— 
One of the newer shrubs and is very 
desirable as a low massing shrub and 
makes a hardy dense hedge of low to 
medium height. 2-3 ft., 60¢; 3-4 ft., $1.00. 
TAMARIX, (Hispida)— 
Fine foliage producing a fernlike effect. 
Attains a height of 6 to 8 feet. Pink 
flowers in July and August. 3-4 ft., 75¢. 
Best Shrubs for Screen Planting 
IO Mie= 
Honeysuckle, French and Persian Lilac, 
Syringa Grandiflora, Russian Olive, 
Arrowwood. 
MEDIUM— 
Spirea Van Houtte, Cotoneaster, Lem- 
oine Syringa. 
Shrubs with most attractive bloom 
Virginal Syringa, Snowflake Syringa, 
Flowering Plum, Flowering Almond, Hy- 
drangea, Lilacs, Forsythia, Spirea Van 
Houtte, Snowball, Weigelia. 
Hardy 
Rose Bushes 
HARRISON’S YELLOW— 
Is perhaps the best known and most 
common June bloomer. 5 to 6 feet tall, 
it is a perfect mass of bright yellow, 
double roses, 1 to 2 inches across, for 
several weeks in June. 
F. J. GROOTENDORST— 
A new hybrid with true Rugosa foliage 
and bright crimson laciniated flowers. 
Blooms almost continually. Compact, 
bushy growth. 
HANSA— 
A large, double, deep red Rose of 
pleasing fragrance. Foliage rich dark 
green. Bush is very hardy and is a splen- 
did ornamental shrub. 
ROSA BLANDA— 
One of the extremely fine shrub roses. 
This makes a shrub 8 to 5 feet tall, is 
spreading, very hardy, filled with single 
pink flowers in the spring followed by 
red berries that make it very attractive 
during the winter months. You need 
these to liven up your landscape. 
BELLE POITEVINE— 
Is a sturdy, strong growing pink Rug- 
osa hybrid perpetual, bearing large bright 
pink, very double flowers. 
HUGONIS— 
The long, arching branches are closely 
set with lovely single flowers very early 
in the season, sometimes before June ist 
in this latitude. The blooms are approxi- 
mately 1% inches across and of clear 
bright yellow which does not fade to 
white. 
Strong 2 year bushes of above varieties, 
$1.25; 3 year bushes, $1.50. 
