CALIFORNIA TREE AND SHRUB SEEDS. 
Abies Douglasii. Douglass Spruce. A very large 
timber tree, 2(J0 to .SOO feet high, of pyramidal shape. 
Found throughout the Rooky Mountains, from Oregon 
to Mexico. Very hardy. Oz. 50c.; lb., S5 00. 
Abies Mertensiana. Tsuga M., Hemlock Spruce. 
A very large tree, 150 to 200 feet high, with rather thick, 
red- brown bark. Very hardy, ranging from California 
far into Alaska. Oz., 60c. ; lb., 16 00. 
Abies Menzeisii. Pioea Sitchensis. Peculiar to the 
Northern Coast, found mostly in wet, sandy soil near the 
month of streams; the tallest spruce known; an excellent 
limber tree; pyramidal form. Very hardy. Oz. 60c.; lb., 
?6 00 . 
Cupressus Goveniana. Goven’s Cypress. Thirty 
to forty feet high; very ornamental; found in the coast 
ranges of Monterey. Oz , 60c.; lb., t6 00. 
Cupressus Macrocarpa. Monterey Cypress. A 
tree forty to sixty feet high, with rough bark, spreading, 
horizontal branches, with rich, green foliage; very orna- 
mental for lawns or parks; also used extensively for 
hedges. Oz., 25o., lb., $2 50. 
Cupressus MoNabiana. McNab’s Cypress, A 
small tree, six to ten feet high, found about Mt. Shasta, 
at 5,000 feet altitude. The leaves are small, and of a 
deep green. Oz. 40c. ; lb., $4 00. 
Cupressus Lawsoniana. Lawson’s Cypress. A 
handsome tree, found in moist ground in the Shasta 
Mountains, and in the Coast ranges of Oregon. The 
wood is white, fragrant, fine and close grained, free from 
knots, easily worked, and very durable; also known as 
Oregon Cedar, White Cedar and Ginger Pine. Oz., 40c., 
lb., $4 00. 
Cupressus Italian. A very erect, close-growing 
tree; fine for entrances and arches. Oz., 25c.; lb., $3 00. 
Cupressus Guadalupensis. Blue Cypress. A new 
fast-growing variety wiin beautiful bluish foliage; very 
ornamental for lawns, parks and cemeteries. Oz., 25c. 
Libooedrus decurrens. Thuya Craigiana. Found 
in the coast ranges, from Oregon to San Diego; grows 
from 100 to 150 feet high; fine, hardy timber tree; known 
as the White Cedar of California. Oz., 30c., lb., 00. 
Madrone. A beautiful native tree of California; the 
foliage is of a deep greeu, and featliery; it attains a con- 
siderable size, flowers white. Oz., 25c. 
Picea amabilis Silver Fir. Tall, symmetrical, val- 
uable timber tree. Oz., 50c ; lb , $5 00. 
Picea grandis. Balsam Fir. Grows 200 to 800 feet 
high, four to six feet in diameter; grows in rich, moist 
soils; valuable timber tree. Uz., 50e.; lb., $5 00. 
Picea nobilis. California lied Fir. A magnificent 
tree, with thick, brown bark, making fine timber; forms 
large forests about the base ol Mt. Bha.sta; timber said to 
be belter than that of other firs. Oz., 50c.; lb., $5 00. 
Picea Magnifica. 200 to 250 feet high. The Red 
Fir of the Sierras, found at an altitude of 7,000 feet. Very 
hardy. Oz., 60c.; lb., $6 00. 
Picea Concolor. Abies lasiocarpa. A very orna- 
mental tree; 100 to 200 feet high; very common through- 
out the Sierras, ranging into Oregon; also found in Ari- 
zona, Utah and Coloraao. Oz., 50c.; lb., S5 00. 
Pinus Benthamiana. A magnificent tree; grows 
from 200 to 300 feet high; fine timber. Very hardy. Oz., 
50c.; lb , 15 00. 
Piuns Coulteri. Great Coned Pine. Found in the 
coast ranges from Mt. Diablo to the southern part of this 
State. Oz , 85c.; lb., ?3 50. 
Pinus contorta. A low tree, live to fifteen feet high, 
found on the wet, sandy coast of the Pacific, from Men- 
docino to Alaska. Very hardy. Oz., 7bc.;lb.. SS 00. 
Pinus Fremontiana. Pinus monophylla. A small 
tree, twenty to twenty-five feet high; frequent in the 
coast ranges in Nevada, Arizona and Utah; well known 
as the Nut Pine. Oz., 30c.; lb., $3 00. 
Pinus insignis. Monterey Pine. A very ornamen- 
tal tree for parks or lawns; grows from sixty to seventy 
feet high, of rapid growth, and has beautiful, green 
foliage. Oz. ; 25c., lb , $2 50. 
Pinus Jeffreyi. A magnificent tree, from 100 to 200 
feet high; usually found ou our mountains at an eleva- 
tion of 5,000 feet, ranging from California to Oregon. 
Very hardy. Oz , 85c.; lb., 3 50. 
Pinus Lambertiana. Sugar pine. A hardy tree of 
gigantic dimensions, from 250 to 300 feet high, and from 
fifteen to twenty feet thick, with light brown, smoothish 
bark; found on both slopes of the Sierras. The wood is 
like that of the White Pine. Oz., 30c.; lb., f3 00. 
Pinus monticola. From sixty to eighty feet high, 
and about three feet in diameter at the base. Found at 
an altitude from 7,000 to 10,000 feet, known as the white 
pine of California, andof the North. Uz., 60c.; lb., S6 00. 
Pinus Parryana. A small tree, twenty to thirty 
feet high, found in the vicinity of San Diego, at an alti- 
tude of 2,000 feet. Oz., 50c.; lb., $5 00. 
Pinus ponderosa. Yellow Pine. Oneof the largest 
pines known, 200 to 300 feet high, and twelve to fifteen 
feet In diameter, with very thick red-brown bark. Found 
in the Coast Range. Very hardy. Oz., 40c.; lb., $4 00. 
Pinua tuberoulata. California Scrub Pine. A small 
crooked tree, often found full of cones when only two or 
three feet high. Oz. 50o.; lb., $5 00. 
Sequoia gigantea. Wellingtonia gigantea. The 
mammoth tree of California. This is the largest tree 
known to exist on the American continent, grows over 
300 feet high. The bark is from one to two feet thick. 
Many of these California trees are over 90 feet in cir- 
cumference. Oz., 60c., lb., $6 00. 
Sequoia sempervirens. Known as the Redwood of 
California. The most valuable timber of the California 
forests. From 200 to 250 feet high, and from eight t-< 
twelve feet in diameter. The wood is of a rich, brownish 
red, light, but strong and durable, making excellent tim- 
ber. Hardy. Oz., 50c., lb. S3 00. 
Thuya gigantea. Giant Arbor Vitae. A tall grace- 
lul tree, 200 to 250 feet high, three to twelve feet thick, 
j’lamidal form, with spreading and somewhat drooping 
ranches, frequent in the coast ranges of Oregon. The 
wood is soft, line-grained, and of light color. Oz., 60c., 
lb., ?6 00. 
Torreya Californioa California Nutmeg. Found 
in the mountain districts. Grows to the hight of 60 feet 
the wood is light-colored, close-grained and small 
branches being redish. Oz., 25., lb., t2 00. 
Arctostaphylos glauca. Great berried Manzaniti.. 
Oz., 50c., lb 62 00. 
Mountain Laurel. Spice Tree. A handsome shrub 
or tree twenty to seventy feet high, the timber very 
handsome and valuable for ornamental wainscoting and 
finishing. Oz., 25c.. lb., f2 00. 
Negundo Californicum, Box Elder. Usually a 
small tree, sometimes reaching a height of seventy tect. 
Oz., 25c., lb., fl 50. 
Acer Maoropy Hum. Maple. A tree of 50 to 90 feet 
high, from coast, ranges in California. The wood is 
white, hard, and takes a fine polish. Oz.,25c., lb., $2 50. 
Cornus Nuttalli. Dogwood. A small showy tree, 
flowering in May, followed by large clusters of double 
berries, resembling the eastern Cornus. Wood close- 
grained and very hard. Oz., ,50c., lb., ?5 00. 
Azalea occidentalis. Charming California Azalea, 
the ornament of the wooded districts. Flowers two to 
three inches long, white, pink variegated. Pkt. 25c. 
Yellow or Black Locust. R pbinia psuedo accacia. 
This variety is noted for its rapid growth of hard and 
durable timber. It is hardy and succeeds well in most 
soils and climates. Oz., lOo ; lb., 60c. 
Honey Locust. Gleditschia Triachanthos. This is 
a large and handsome tree. The trunk and branches 
generally beset with long and formidable spines, on 
which account it has been employed as a hedge. The 
wood IS heavy and affords excellent fuel. Oz., 10c.; lb., 
6Jc. 
Osage Orange. Madura Aurantiaca. One of the 
most valuable of hedge plants. The plants will also 
grow into fine trees, and the wood endures for centuries. 
Lb., 50c. 
Hawthorn. Crataigus oxyacantha. A very hand- 
some thorny hedge plant, which has been grown in 
various parts of the Northern and Middle States. Oz., 
15.; lb., »1 50. 
Buckthorn. Rhamnus eatbarticus. This makes a 
strong thorny hedge, adapted to the North and Middle 
States. Oz., 20c., lb., 00. 
