ADD BREATH-TAKING BEAUTY TO YOUR GARDEN! 
with  yyerip 
FRENCH 
NOTE: It should be remembered in connection with 
the color descriptions of Lilacs that the colors of all 
Lilacs are soft, and except for the whites, are a blend- 
ing of colors rather than one pure tone. After trans- 
planting it often requires two seasons or more for Lilacs 
to again produce their true color. 
NEW!! NEW!! 
NEWER VARIETIES OF LILACS 
Clarke’s Giant. Single gentian blue. Very large. 
Pat. 754. 
Esther Staley. Large single pure pink. 
Pat. 768. 
Mme. Chas. Souchet. Large single, sky blue. 
Splendor. Double purplish blue. 
Pat. 837. 
Sunset. Double mauve carmine. 
Pats: 
Sweetheart. Double, palest lavender. 
Above lilacs priced $4.50 each; 3 for $12.00 
FLOWERING QUINCE. Low growing shrub, glossy 
foliage. 
Common Red. $2.00 each. 
NEW FLOWERING QUINCE 
Coral Beauty. Rosy coral. 
Red Ruffles. Dazzling ruffled red. 
Apple Blossom. Pink and white. 
Stanford Red. Tomato red. Outstanding. 
Price new quince, $3.50 each. 
RIVERS PURPLE BEECH. No flowers on this shrub 
but it possesses the most outstanding foliage of purple 
that you will find on any shrub, and one that will 
give your garden that unique atmosphere. This is 
something that you won’t find in everybody’s garden. 
2-3 ft., $5.00; 4-5 ft., $8.00. 
TAMARIX 
Hispida. A beautiful shrub with bright pink flowers 
in June and July. Very hardy. For best results with 
this shrub, cut back to the ground every two years. 
As they are rather hard to start, we give them a 
severe pruning prior to shipment. 3-4 ft., $2.50. 
SMOKE TREE. An attractive specimen continuously 
from early spring until late fall; particularly fascin- 
ating in July, when it carries a great mass of filmy 
purplish clusters that resemble a rising cloud of smoke. 
Its flat leaves are stained pink, when young, and 
are of yellow and purple in autumn. 2-3 ft., $2.50. 
BRONZE-LEAVED SMOKE TREE. Similar in 
growth and habits to the well-known Smoke 
Tree, only this variety is the rare bronze-leaved 
and “bronze-plumed” Smoke Tree. Bronze foli- 
age and bronze colored so-called plume or 
smoke. Nice bushes 2-3 ft. tall. $4.00. 
Page 16 
Spokane’s 
9 
Lilacs Adopted Flower 
Adelaide Dunbar. Double, dark red. 
Alice Eastwood. Double, mauve pink. 
Belle de Nancy. Double satiny rose. 
Charles Joly. Double dark reddish-purple. 
Capt. Perrault. Double pink. 
Firmament. Single, sky blue. 
Gismonda. Double, reddish purple. 
Katé Sessions. Single, mauve purple. 
Katherine Havemeyer. Double, purplish mauve. 
Marechal Foch. Single, carmine pink. 
Mad. Lemoine. Double white. 
Pres. Loubet. Dark red. 
Marechal Lannes. Semi-double violet blue. 
Ludwig Spaeth. Single dark purple. 
Persian. Reddish purple. 
Villosa, Late pale pink. 
Prices above lilacs, $2.75 each. 
SPIREA 
Anthony Waterer. Flat heads of rosy-pink flowers 
are borne all summer on these popular, compact, 
dwarf shrubs. Attractive foliage. 12-15 in., $1.50; 
15-18 in., $2.00. 
Mongolica. Often called the Snowbank Spirea _ be- 
cause it is the earliest of all Spireas to bloom. Al- 
ways in full blooms along with the Forsythia, you 
will marvel at the effect when the two are planted 
together. Graceful in growing habit and never over 
5 ft. at maturity. Also lovely when used with any 
of the early blooming bulbs like Daffodils and 
Scillas. 2-3 ft. $2.50 each. 
Prunifolia. The true bridalwreath spirea. Produces 
great masses of double white flowers that are very 
showy and excellent for cutting. 2-3 ft., $2.00; 3-4 
ft., $2.50. 
Thunbergi. A fine display of white bloom in early 
spring prior to leaves. Foliage is soft and feathery. 
Rather spreading habit. 3-4 ft., $2.50. 
Van Houtte. A graceful, pendulous shrub surpassing 
all other spireas with its superb gracefulness. The 
most widely planted of the spireas. 2-3 ft., $1.50; 
3-4 ft., $2.00. 
