Beginning at a point near the east end of the Garden, the 

 center driveway of our nursery passes on the right the gently 

 sloping fields where grow the Rhododendrons and Azaleas 

 which we glimpsed from "The Vista"; great masses of 

 American Holly and other Ilexes; while to the left are 

 many rare varieties of Junipers and large blocks of American 

 Hemlocks. 



It is impossible, in the little space available, to cover the 

 complete nursery. We can only mention the remarkable 

 block of Juniperus depressa plumosa, a low-growing ever- 

 green which for certain uses has no equal; the long rows of 

 shade trees for street planting; the shrubs, hedge plants, per- 

 ennial beds, in fact, everything necessary for completely plant- 

 ing the most extensive estates. 



The propagating or plant-manufacturing section deserves a 

 special word. Here thousands of cuttings are making roots in 

 the greenhouses; millions of tiny seedlings just peeping 

 through the ground; frame after frame of plants in various 



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