1^ P I C 17 Y ' C Hardy American Plant* 
IV Hi I-« >J l-i I O Rhododendron* and Azaleas 
Catalog of BOXFORD NURSERY 
EVERGREEN TREES AND SHRUBS (continued) 
Pinus strobus. White Pine. Each 10 100 1,000 
3 vr. S. 9 to 12 in. (bed) 1 00 8 OO 
6 to 9 in 10 75 .5 00 40 00 
1 to 1% ft 20 1 50 12 50 110 00 
114 to 2 ft 35 3 00 25 00 200 00 
2 to 3 ft 60 5 00 45 00 400 00 
3 to 4 ft 1 25 10 00 80 00 
4 to 5 ft 2 50 20 00 
6 to 8 ft 6 00 50 00 
sylvestris. Scotch Pine. 
2 to 3 ft 75 6 00 50 00 400 00 
3 to 4 ft 1 25 10 00 80 00 
4 to 5 ft 2 00 18 00 160 00 
5 to 6 ft 3 00 26 00 
6 to 8 ft 4 00 35 00 325 00 
thunbergi. 
4 to 6 in 25 1 50 12 00 100 00 
waterlana. 1 to 1% ft 1 25 10 00 
Pseudotsuga douglasi (taxifolia). Douglas Spruce. 
1 to 1 1/2 ft 60 5 00 40 00 
1^4 to 2 ft 1 00 8 00 70 00 
2 to 3 ft 1 50 12 50 100 00 
3 to 4 ft 2 00 18 00 
Retinlspora obtusa. 1 to 2 in. S. 15 1 00 5 00 40 00 
obtusa gracilis. 1 ft 75 6 00 
2^ ft 2 00 18 00 
obtusa nana. to 2 ft.... 2 00 18 00 
obtusa pygmaea. 9 to 12 in. 1 50 12 50 
pisifera. 6 to 7 ft 4 00 
RHODODENDRONS 
Rhododendron arbutifolium (wllsoni). Each 10 
9 to 12 in $1 00 $8 50 
1 to 1% ft 2 00 18 00 
IM to 2 ft 3 00 
RHODODENDRON C4ROLINIANUM 
A New American Species 
Clear Pink- Absolutely Hard}). 
The smallest AUeghanian species; though wild, it attains a 
height of 15 feet and Is wide-.spreafling. Leaves darlc green, 
usuailv blunt and narrow, covered with rusty dots below, 
much "smaller than either maximum or catawbiense. Flower- 
clusters appear in greatest profusion in June, covering the 
plant with a rose-colored mantle. Fine for rocky slopes or 
hill-sides, standing exposure unusually well, and Invaluable 
as a single specimen or for massing with the other species. 
Each 10 100 
9 to 12 in W 75 $6 00 ?50 00 
1 to 1% ft 1 00 8 00 
1 to 1% ft. clumps 2 00 17 50 150 00 
to 2 ft. clumps 3 50 32 50 300 00 
2 to 3 ft. clumps 6 00 50 00 
3 to 4 ft. clumps 10 00 90 00 
4 to 5 ft. clumps 15 00 
RHODODENDRON CATAWBIENSE 
Of the Carolina Mountains 
The Hardiest of all Rhododendrons 
It was this maguincent Rhododendron that over a hundred 
vcars ago was introduced into Europe, supplying, together 
with Rhododendron maximum and R. punctatum, color and 
hardy blood to the cultivated "hybrids", but with a conse- 
"And to paint these home pictures we need chiefly 
American material. We must face this deadly parallel: 
"What We Really Plant. 70% European trees and 
shrubs and horticultural varieties. 20% Chinese and 
Japanese. 10% American. 
"What We Ought To Plant. 70% American trees and 
shrubs, 1. e., native to Americu. 20% Chinese and 
Japanese. 10% European and horticultural." 
Wllhelm Miller, In "What England Can Teach Us About 
Gardening." 
6 
