DECIDUOUS FLOWERING TREES 
Ideal for Shade and Beautiful Spring Calor 
FLOWERING APRICOTS 
Blooming considerably earlier than the flowering peaches, these 
charming trees brighten our winter gardens with delicate colors and 
spicy fragrance. 
Bare Root $1.50 up; 5 Gal. $3.00 up. 
Dawn. Large, ruffled, double pink flowers of intense fragrance. 
Midseason. 
Peggy Clarke. A wealth of medium sized double flowers of deep 
rose. 
Rosemary Clarke. Large, pure white double flowers. Very fragrant. 
FLOWERING CHERRIES 
Flowering Cherries are known for the exquisite character of their 
prolific bloom, but their bright green foliage is prized as well. 
Bare Root $1.50 to $3.00, slightly higher in containers. 
Ben Higan. Very early pale pink double flowers. 
Campanula. Countless pink, fuchsia-like blooms are suspended in 
very early spring from every twig and branch of this sturdy, upright 
tree. 
Daybreak. Called the most beautiful tree in the world, this erect 
growing tree is a cloud of pink every spring with no leaf showing. 
A magnificent single. 
Mt. Fuji. Large, snowy white double flowers produced in abun- 
dance—the only snow-white rose-flowering cherry in cultivation 
in this country. 
Shirofugen. When first open, the large flowers are soft pink soon 
changing to white and later to cerise—a constant pink and white 
effect on the same tree. 
Stribling’s Pink. Single apple blossom pink of great charm and 
abundant bloom. 
DOGWOOD 
Cornus florida, White Flowering Dogwood. Small tree, most effec- 
tive in shaded locations for the attractive white flowers. Petals, 
like the Poinsettia, are bracts encircling the tiny flowers in the 
center. Early spring. 
Cornus florida rubra, Pink Flowering Dogwood. The most spectacu- 
lar with light red or pink flowers. Peat or leaf mold in the soil to 
insure an acid reaction. Partial shade. Grafted. $3.50 up. 
HAWTHORN 
Crataegus, Paul’s Scarlet. Masses of double carmine-red flowers in 
spring. Red berries in fall. 
Crataegus Carrierei. White flowing pyramidal tree. Large red berries 
in fall. 
Crataegus Cordata (Washington). White flowers, grows up to 20 
feet high. Clusters of small red berries in fall. 
FLOWERING CRABAPPLE 
Malus scheideckeri. Double pink; yellow fruit. 
Malus eleyi purpurea. Purple-red blossoms, leaves reddish when 
young. Fruit dark wine-purple. 
Malus ioensis plena, Bechtel Crab. Small tree to 15 feet. Crowded 
in spring with large, fragrant, double pale pink flowers. The bright 
green leaves which follow are neat all year. 
Malus floribunda. Tall, slender tree with graceful branches. Flow- 
ers large, single, typical apple blossom pink. 
- Malus hopi. Red buds and red fruit. 
FLOWERING LOCUSTS 
Robinia decaisneana, Pink Locust. Tall rapid growing variety of Black 
Locust with long racemes of fragrant pink flowers. 
FLOWERING 
PEACH 
TREES see 
Beautiful low growing trees won= 
derful for spring bloom before © 
the leaves. Large double flowers 
in great masses, clothe every 
stem. Excellent for cutting. After 
bloom is over prune heavily for next 
season’s bloom. Hardy. 
Any of the following $1.50 up. 
Slightly higher in containers. 
Early Red. Magnificent ruby-red flowers. 
Late Red. Same ruby-red as early variety. 
Early Pink. Earliest; beautiful rose-pink. 
Late Pink. Same rose-pink as early variety. 
Candystick (Variegated) . Striped red and white. 
Helen Borchers. One of the finest double pink varieties. 
White. Large snow-white flowered variety. 
PURPLE-LEAVED PLUMS 
Priced $1.50 up. Slightly higher in containers. 
Prunus Blireianma. Brilliant red foliage later turning greenish. Flow- 
ers dainty soft pink and double line the long slender stems in spring. 
~ Prunus pissardi, Purple Leaf Plum. Small tree, deep purple leaves 
and small pale pink flowers in spring. Deep red branches and twigs 
are interesting even in winter. 
Prunus Thundercloud. Really lives up to its name. Masses of early 
white flowers followed by bronzy-purple foliage holding color 
throughout the summer. 
BECHTEL’S FLOWERING CRAB 
Beautiful spring color and pleasant shade. DZ 
