#§14} For late May into early June, having become a little tired of the overplanted bridal â€" wreath spirea, I now prefer to recomâ€" mend the Lemoine deutzia, which is much more compact and has large white flowers. Of course I must admit that a well â€" pruned bridal â€" wreath spirea, trained so that its flowâ€" ering branches hang almost to the ground, is a magnificent sight. This is also the season for In midâ€"May I prefer Judd‘s viburnum to any other shrub. It is very elegant and distinctive and has clusters of fragrant roseâ€"tinted white blooms, which are produced in abundance. May brings such an abundâ€" ance of flowering shrubs that it is hard to choose only a few. I must include the beautiful alâ€" mond cherry (Prunus glandulo sa and its relative the double flowering almond or flowering plum (Prunus triloba). l6 During April we have the Korâ€" ean golden bells, which always produces a good crop of blooms, the Nanking cherry, a very beaâ€" utiful shrub that never fails to flower in the Ottawa area, and the dwarf Russian almond, with large pink almondlike blooms. Toward the end of this month those who have tenderly cared for the saucer magnolia will be rewarded by a crop of lovely pink tuliplike blossoms. If the weather is mild during March, the brave little February daphne, (a common name given to Daphne merereum by those who _ obviously live farther south) will burst into bloom. I have often seen this shrub covâ€" ered with flowers at one corner of the garden while snow was piled up at the other. I prefer the white variety to the comâ€" mon lavender one because it seems to fit in better with the crocus, â€" muscari â€" and _ squills, which often flower at the same time. In March, if the weather is still severe, we must look to the pussy willow for our first flowâ€" ering shrub. The common varâ€" iety that grows in â€" nearby swamps has very small catkins, so if I were planting one, I would choose that goat willow (Salix caprea), a native of Eurâ€" ope, which does not look out of place in the shrub border and will provide you with the most beautiful of all catkins in very early spring. __ _ by A.R. Buckley FLOWERING sHrRruBs THROUGH THE YEAR Do you know that it is possiâ€" ble, even in Eastern Canada, to have .an @@#tractive shrub in bloom" every ‘growing month of the year, from March to »Octoâ€" ber or November? Here are some good examples that are found on the grounds of the Plant Research Institute at Otâ€" tawa. ~ ®@ Upholstery @ Wallpapers & Slipcovers Featuring SANDERSON‘S Wallpaper 46 KING S. and Draperies s * YOUR HOMKEK DECORATING SERVICE wITNHOUT OBLIGATION OR EXTRA ,CHARGE PHONE 744â€"7731 omplete Decorating Service: G. W. HALL The Waterioo Chronisie, Wed., March 17, 1988 INTERIORS I have named here about eighteen _ different â€" kinds of shrubs, all of which, with the exception of the spike broom, should be easy lto obtain from nurserymen, and if planted in a shrub border or around the home will give interest in sprâ€" ing, summer and fall. September sees the peegee hyâ€" drangea changing from white to rose and then to green. In Ocâ€" tober, and until the heavy frosts of November, the beautiful witchâ€"hazel (Hamamelis virginâ€" iana)}, which rounds off the seaâ€" son of shrubs, produces its yelâ€" low lacy flowers with strapâ€"shaâ€" ped petals. The odd thing about this shrub is that it flowers the same time as its leaves are fallâ€" ing. The best and most graceful of all shrubs that flower.in August, and one that keeps on through most of September, is the Sumâ€" mer Glow fiveâ€"stamen tamarix. This shrub has beautiful soft plumes of lightâ€"pink, which arâ€" ise from a mist of feathery lightâ€" green foliage. I always associate the Snowâ€" hill hydrangea with August, alâ€" though it starts to flower in July. It has very large trusses of snowâ€"white flowers and large heart â€" shaped leaves. The smokebush will be in flower through July and August right until the end of Septemâ€" ber, when its feathery plumage waves in the wind. Something novel, the Royal Purple smokeâ€" bush, has deepâ€"purple leaves as well as fine pink plumage. During â€" July, â€" shrubs _ that bloom are very rare, and we are ever grateful for fine compatâ€" ible shrubs, the spike broom (Cytisus nigricans), the shrubby lespedeza â€" (Lespedera â€" bicolor) and the buttonbush (Cephalaâ€" nthus occidentalis). The broom is yellow and grows four feet high, each shoot terminating with a spiky raceme of deep â€" yellow .flowers. The lespedeza has very graceful clusters of bluish pealike flowers produced in abundance on an eight â€" foot shrub, and the> button â€"â€" bush, which grows wild hereabouts, has globeâ€"shaped oneâ€"inch pinâ€" cushionlike flowers and glossy, brightâ€"green foliage. lilacs â€" and who would be withâ€" qut them? My favorite one is a Preston hybrid named Elimor, which blooms later than the othâ€" ers in June and has pink flow ers that emit a most delightful fragrance pver ‘a wide area. 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