WESTBURY STATION, N. Y. 
Evergreens 
fullest usefulness, comfort 
and beauty of the land is 
not attained. Nursery- 
men and their customers 
have both contributed to 
this mistake. The desire 
for quick results, the ease 
of importing, competi- 
tion, and lack of the skill, 
foresight and botanical 
knowledge needed to 
grow hardy evergreens 
are responsible. 
What to do.— Order a 
quantity of these pines 
and other evergreens. 
Plant the little seedlings, 
6 inches high, in the grass 
of abandoned land, or in 
beds to grow on for 
planting - out later. If 
you want larger ever- 
greens, we have them 
This laundry yard had to be next the entrance drive. It looks merely the thicker 
portion of a grove of Cedars. 
from I foot to 40 feet high, and can move them in the best way by the most successful method. 
Evergreens have been unjustly regarded the luxury of the wealthy. We have grown them at a price 
that will allow them to contribute to the comfort of every class. Our evergreens fit Long Island; there- 
fore they are beautiful, and make utility the vehicle of beauty. Long Island is wind-swept. Thousands 
who cannot afford two residences desire to live in the country all the year. If transit and schools 
suited, and the winter bleakness were lessened, they would do so. 
Portion of formal garden at Roslyn House, the residence ot Mr. Stanley Mortimer, Hedge and arches of Cedar moved by us 
