Hedge Plants 
Privet. perg 100 saan eee $10.00 to $20.00 
Cotoneaster: per] 00 same oe =a ee 30.00 
Gnilla*Maple,veach sae ee ee .50 
Barberry, (2. 2) 2 ene eee .25 to 1.00 
Pussy 2 W411] 0 vgn ered Upeto 250 
Poplar—Lombardy, 5 ft. to 6 ft. and down... .50 
Poplar—Bolleana, 15c per ft.; large 20c per ft. 
Lilac—Common, per 100 2 10.00 
Lilae— Double, cach. 5.20 oa eee 2.00 
Vines 
Trumpet Vine Engelmann’s Creeper 
Climbing Rambler Silver Lace Vine 
Bittersweet Wisteria 
Clematis—75c 
Cuttings for Planting 
$1.00 per 100 
Lombardy Poplar Cuttings can often grow with- 
out irrigation, but under irrigation they can grow 
seven feet tall in one year. If you wish to grow them 
without irrigation, summer fallowed soil is by far 
the most satisfactory. 
With experience you can grow many trees from 
cuttings. 
Scarce Item 
A Real Novelty — 
12.,to 2 Vinch. bulbs as saa $1.50 
1 to 114 in, bulbs.__$1.00; 14 to 1 in. bulbs 25 
Bulblets larger than %4 inch LZe tore. 00 
small bulblets\] aus. sasueee ane 3 doz. for 1.00 
Feather Hyacinth, tasseled or Fair Haired Hya- 
cinth, or Shredded Lilac are the common names given 
this Bulb; the correct name is MUSCARI COMASUM 
VAR. MONSTROSUM. A Most interesting hardy 
plant, similar to Muscari Plumosum. 
Leaves are about two thirds inch wide and about 
one foot long. Raceme 1% to 1% foot long, the top 
two thirds in shape resembles a sheared cone-shaped 
cedar, color a blue mist, often bending until it reaches 
the ground. The base of the cone is two to three 
inches in diameter, from there to the bulb is a 
smooth, naked stem. 
_ Dormant July and August, root growth starts 
in September. 
