Flowering Crabapples 
Enthusiasm is difficult to restrain when Crabapples are in bloom. 
The dainty pastel shading of the airy flowers, the brilliant coloring 
of the fruits, the intricate cross-branching habits, all serve to set 
them apart as worthy of a place in almost every planting. Many 
make fine jellies, and many provide food for the birds. 
We grow our Crabapples both for specimen plants and for 
screening purposes, the latter being low-branched and in shrub 
form. 
MALUS arnoldiana (Arnold Crab). Twelve feet. One of 
the best varieties, large pendulous pink blossoms and 
yellow fruits. 
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atrosanguinea (Carmine Crab). Fifteen feet. A mass of 
single brilliant carmine flowers. 
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baccata (Siberian Crab). Thirty feet. Single white 
fragrant blossoms, small green or reddish fruit. 
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Bob White. A sport of floribunda, pink flower buds open- 
ing pure white. Long lasting yellow fruit. 
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brivipes. Twelve feet. A dwarf spreading form with an 
abundance of white flowers and yellow fruit; splendid 
for limited space. 
Dolgo. Twelve feet. Shapely and neat. Red fruit, fine for 
jelly. In the spring it is one solid mass of large white 
blooms. 
eleyi (Eley Crab). Eighteen feet. Leaves purple, flowers 
rosy carmine. 
Flame. Blossoms crabapple-pink. Ripening fruit re- 
sembles flame of fire. 
floribunda (Flowering Crab). Twenty feet. Bright pink 
and white flowers, with small yellow fruit. 
Each 
$3.50 
5.50 
8.00 
12.00 
5.00 
2.50 
Per 10 
$31.50 
49.50 
72.00 
108.00 
31.50 
49.50 
67.50 
81.00 
45.00 
72.00 
45.00 
72.00 
