MARSHALL 

Coralberry 
Small, low-growing shrub of very grace- 
ful habit, slightly drooping with very small 
flowers. Red berries hang on all winter. 
Foliage is excellent, green throughout 
the season. Thrives both in sun and shade. 
One of the best low shrubs to plant close 
to trees. Height 2 to 4 feet. 
Nebraska’s 
Oldest Nurseries 
Showy Border Forsythia (Golden Bell) 
The golden yellow bell flowers appear very early in 
the spring, before the leaves. Shiny dark green leaves, 
which persist until frost. Twigs cut in mid-winter and 
placed in vase in warm room will send out blossoms 
and leaves in a short time. Height 6 to 8 feet. 


Wahoo 
(Euonymus purpureus) 
Used as a large shrub or small 
tree. It might be mistaken for a 
wild Plum except for its fluted ash- 
gray bark. Red fruit similar to the 
Bittersweet, which shows its beauty 
chiefly in the dead of winter. Foli- 
age beautiful in fall. Hardy in east- 
ern Nebraska and South Dakota, 
and east and south. May be grown 
in tree form or in shrub form by 
trimming. 

Jetbead (Rhodotypos) 
A distinctive, decorative shrub. 
Foliage very large and hand- 
some. Branches clustered with 
delicious white pendulous flow- 
ers in May and June, followed 
by black berries which remain 
through the winter. 
[16] 
NURSERIES 

Snowberry 
A small low growing shrub of pleas- 
ing habit. Flowers very small, followed 
by pure white round fruits, the size of 
marbles. While it is used in both sun 
and shade, it occasionally mildews in 
the shade. Height 2 to 4 feet. 
Nebraska’s 
Largest Nurseries 

New Flowering Quince, 
Crimson Beauty 
A new upright type, bush form, with large 
double, deep scarlet blossoms and golden sta’ 
mens. Hardy. Height 3 to 5 feet. 
