T7" 17 T C T7 "V C Hardy American Plants 
JV J-i JLi O J-i X O Rhododendrons and Azaleas 
^glabra. (3 to 12 in. 
Per 10 
100 
SI 
25 
$10 
00 
3 
(H) 
1 
50 
2 
50 
1 
25 
10 
(K) 
1 
75 
15 
00 
1 
25 
10 
00 
1 
25 
10 
00 
1 
50 
12 
00 
2 
00 
18 
00 
3 
50 
25 
00 
1 
00 
8 
00 
1 
25 
10 
00 
2 
00 
3 
50 
75 
5 
00 
1 
75 
12 
50 
3 
00 
2 
50 
1 
25 
10 
00 
3 
00 
75 
5 
00 
1 
25 
10 
00 
1 
75 
15 
00 
2 
50 
20 
oo 
1 
25 
10 
00 
1 
75 
15 
00 
2 
00 
1 
25 
10 
(K) 
2 
00 
18 
00 
3 
00 
60 
5 
00 
1 
00 
8 
00 
1 
75 
15 
00 
1 
25 
2 
50 
4 
00 
00 
8 
(K) 
1 
50 
12 
50 
00 
2 
00 
15 
00 
50 
12 
50 
2 
50 
1,000 
Catalog of Highlands Nursery 
TREES. SHRUBS AND VINES, continued 
DlerviUa diervilla. 0 to 12 in 
rirularls. 1 to 2 ft 
sessiUfolia. t> to 12 in 
1 to 2 ft 
Diospyros Wrginiana. (> to 12 in 
1 to 2 ft 
Dlrca palustris. 0 to 12 in 
Euonymus americanus. 6 to 12 in 
lanceolata. 2 to 4 ft 
4 to 6 ft 
6 to S ft 
oregona. 1 to 2 ft 
Gaylussacia resinosa. 1 to 2 ft 
Gelsemium sempervirens. 6 to 18 in 
Hamamelis Tirglnica. Witrh Hazel. 6tol2in. 
1 to 2 ft 
2 to 3 ft 
3 to 4 ft 
Hydrangea arborescens. 6 to 12 in 
1 to 2 ft 
radiata. 1 to U ft 
^Hypericum aureum. 1 to 2 ft 
2 to 3 ft 
3 to 4 ft 
«densiflorum. 1 to 2 ft 60 5 00 $40 00 
2 to 3 ft 
3 to 4 ft 
*proUflcum. 1 to 2 ft 
2 to 3 ft 
=<'Ilex cassine. (3 to 1 2 in 
decidua. 6 to 12 in .". . 
lto2ft 
130 00 
ILEX MONTICOLA. Mountain Holly. 15 to 25 ft. The largest of the 
dcciduoufi HolUo.«, the pistillate plant producing abundant scarlet 
fruit in symmetrical rows in fall and early winter, suKge.sting the 
local name of "Bead Bush." Per 10 100 1,000 
6 to 12 in $1 00 $8 00 
1 to 2 ft 1 25 10 00 
2 to 3 ft 1 75 14 00 
3 to 4 ft 3 00 
4 to 6 ft 3 00 
♦OPACA. American Holly. (ilol2in 2 00 18 OO $100 00 
Itoljft 2 50 22 00 
lJto2ft 4 00 35 00 
2 to 3 ft 8 00 70 00 
3 to 4 ft : 10 00 
vertldUata. 1 to 2 ft 1 50 12 00 
Ilicioides TNemopanthea) mucronata 
1) to 12 in 1 .50 
Itea Tirginlca. Uo2ft 1 25 10 (K) 
*Juniperu8 communis. 3 to 4 ft. 4 (X) 
"prostrata nana. 6 to 12 in 2 00 IS 00 
I to 2 ft 4 00 
*Tirginlana. 4 to 6 ft 0 00 
KALMIA 
XKALMIA ANGUSTIFOLIA. 6 to 12 in 1 25 10 00 80 00 
Ito Uft 2 50 22 00 
GLAUCA. (ito 12 in 1 50 12 00 
LATIFOLIA. Mountain Lauroi. One of the grandeat of our native, 
hroad-leaved evergreen shrubs, attaining tree-like proportions in our 
southern mountains. In cultivation it is a broad, thick shrub, and, 
when in full bloom, of surpassing beauty. The wheel-shaped flowers 
in close terminal corymbs, pure white to pink, appear in May or June 
in such profusion as almost to smother the foliage. Its thick, shiny 
leaves, conspicuous the year round, make it a shrub of greatest value 
for massing. The hardiness of Kalmia laiifolia is beyond doubt, it 
being found sparingly in Nova Scotia and increasingly in abundance 
through New England and the middle Atlantic states (particularly in 
the higher altitudes), till the crest of the southern Alleghanies is 
reached. Here, the true American home of the broad-leaved ericacese, 
f)erfect conditions of soil and climate are found, producing such a 
uxuriance of growth as to form veritable jungles of gorgeous beauty, 
rnilcs in extent. It is found throughout South Carolina, Georgia, and 
northern Florida, along the banks of streams and cypress swamps. 
This proves it to be a plant that will stand almost semi-tropical con- 
ditions as well as extreme cold. It is therefore extremely valuable for 
the southern states, taking itj* place with the magnificent Indian 
Azaleas, which are not hardy in the North. 
EVERGREENS ARE MARKED WITH A STAR (*) 
8 
