Evergreens "^ ^g^omU^ o// 'Gartjorn 



Thuya, continued 

 Occidentalis aurea, var. George Peabody. Golden 

 ArboTVilx. A broadly pyramidal, low-growing tree, 

 with the growth of the season suffused with yellow. 

 Holds its color throughout the year. Each 



2 feet Si -5 



3 feet 2 50 



Occidentalis Ellwangeriana. Ellwanger's Arbor- 



vit:r. low growing, pyramidal, with slender branches 

 ciotiied with two kinds of foliage of a bluish purple 

 color. 2 feet, $2 each. 



Occidentalis ericoides. Heatb-leavtd Arborvitx. 

 Low, compact, symmetrical growth. The green, 

 finely divided foliage turns to bronze in winter, making 

 it very coti-^picuous among other Evergreens at that 

 season of tin- \iar. i ' to 2 feet. Si. 50 each. 



Occidentalis globosa. Globe Arborvitx. A low, 

 compact, globe-shaped evergreen with brighter green 

 foliage. Formal and striking, i >i to 2 feet, $2 each. 



Occidentalis Hoveyi. Hovey's Arborvitx. A slow- 

 growing form with golden green foliage. 2', feet, 

 $2.50 to S3. 50 each. 



Occidentalis Reedii. Reed's Arborvilx. Similar 

 to the above, but of a somewhat coarser growth. 2 to 

 3 feet, $3.50 each. 



Occidentalis pyramidalis. Pyramidal Arborvitsc. 

 A com|>act, narrowly pyramidal tree. Branches short 

 and (icnsfls iloilu-d with hriniit ^reen foliage. Very 

 formal atui altravtl\e and the narrowest and most 

 columnar of the Arboryit;es. 4 feet, S2.50 each. 



Occidentalis sibirica. Siberian Arborvitx. Large, 

 dark green foliage; strong, pyramidal growth. Very 

 good and extremely hardy. 3 to 4 feet, $2.50 to $3 each. 



Occidentalis Wareana. Ware's Arborvitx. Tall 

 growing; light sulphur-yellow foliage which gradually 

 deepens in autumn. One of the hardiest of the Ameri- 

 can Arborvitas. Each 



2 feet $1 50 



3 to 4 feet 2 50 



Occidentalis Vervaeneana. A gracefully drooping, 



yellow-marked Lvergreen. Turns bronzy in winter. 

 Hardy and very attractive. Each 



2 to 3 feet Si 50 



3 to 4 feet 4 00 



Thuyopsis 



A genus of a single species, closely related to 

 Thuya but differing mainly in the number of 

 seeds under the scales. W hile quite hardy in New 

 England, it requires for its best development a 

 sheltered situation in a moist, loamy soil. 



Borealis. Japanese Tbuva. A dense, erect stirub or 

 small tree with avcendlng brandies, droopin.r ,1 tl,,. 

 tips. Japanese E\ert;reen of nuich l>eauty. 

 sheltered po.itioii in a moist soil. In such ; 

 it is an ornament to any garilcii, 3 feet, S». 



|ulrt" 

 .uati( 

 each. 



Tsuga • Hemlock 



A beautiful and extremely graceful group of 

 trees, characterized by their slender and droop- 

 ing shoots. They thri\e in well-drained soil 

 fully exposed to sun and air. 



Canadensis. Canadian Hemlock. A tall-growing, 

 graceful tree with spreading and drooping branches, 

 which form a pyramidal trown. Oous natiiraliv from 

 Nova Scotia aiul W isconsin to Crornia and Alabama. 

 Foliage dark green and >;loss\. (^)nes ' _. iiu li or more 

 long. One of our finest trees, iiulispeiisable lor park and 

 landscape. Will, perhaps, thrisc in a iiiorevliadv situa- 

 tion than most Evergreens. An ideal subieet lor wood- 

 land planting, either in groups or scattered; a Hemlock 

 hedge is a thing of beauty in any garden. Each 



1 to 2 feet $0 75 



2 to 3 feet I 50 



3 to 4 feet 3 00 



4 to 5 feet 4 00 



Canadensis pendula Sargentii. Sari;cnl's Weep- 

 ing Hemlock. A low-growing form with pendant 

 branches, forming a dense. Hat-topped head. Extremely 

 distinct and beautiful, i J 2 to 2 feet. Si. 50 to S^.io l ach. 



Caroliniana. Carolina Hemlock. A tree with grace 

 and beauty seldom excelled. Of more compact habit 

 than the Canadian Hemlock, but, being a native of the 

 Alleghanies from Virginia to South Carolina and Georgia, 

 it requires a sheltered position in New England in order 

 ?d well. I to 2 feet, ^o qts. to Si each. 



Composite fount; 



Bulkeley. Hartford, Conn. 



