znrs&a&EEKS 
TREES 
176 
Fottler, Fiske, Rawson Co. 
Evergreens 
1.50 
1.25 
1.00 
ARBORVITi® (Thuya). Tlipfw 
highly (iriiiitnpi'tal trees, 
thoiiKli iiimiy are of upright 
haliit, do not grow to great 
height.s, and ar(( very api)ro- 
jirialo for .small lawns as well 
a.s large arejis. 'I'lieir clean, 
neat, compact appearam^e, 
and the soft, hern-liko foliage, 
brightly colored. 
American. .I ft. 7,5c., 4 ft..?1.00 
Peabody’s Golden. Dwarf 
goldtm variety. 2 ft. 
7.5c., 3 ft. 
globosa (Glohc-hcaded).. 
12 in. 75c., 18 in. 1.00 
Hoveyll. Cloldcn-grcen fo¬ 
liage. 18 in. 75c., 2 ft... 
Pyramidal. 2 ft. 75c., 3 ft. 
Slbirica. Hlni.sh green. 
18 in. 75c., 2 ft. 1.00 
FIR (Abies). Very hardy, tiuick- 
growing evergreens, that arc 
u.sefiil in ijroducing natural 
and wooded effects, tis well as 
in the more attractive^ deeoni.- 
tion of parks and lawns. 'I'liey 
mature raiiidly and on this ac¬ 
count arc valuable for plant¬ 
ing in connection with slow- 
growing trees, because they 
give the itrompt cfft'ct jind arc 
ready to give place to the slow 
growing iicrmanent trees when 
they maturtn The soft, deep 
green imedles of most varie¬ 
ties arc fragrant with balstimic 
otiors. Used for gnniijing, 
windbreaks and hedgo. 
Balsam. 2 to 3 ft. 75c., 4 
to 5 ft.SI.50 
Concolor (White Fir). An 
elegant Colonido tree 
with long glaucous-col¬ 
ored leaves and bninch- 
es, in whorls of pi((tur- 
estpie character, being 
one of the brightest of 
lawn trees. 2 ft. SI..50, 
2 to ft. S2.00, 2'4 to 
3 ft. 
Veitchii (Veitcli’s Silver 
Fir).S2.00and 
CEDRUS^ 
Atlantica Glauca. Delicate steel-b.lue tint, equal 
to finest (.'olorado Blue 8pruce. 2 ft.S2.00 
JUNIPER (Juniperus). .\ group remarkable for the 
viiried form it eml>race.s. Trees of medium height 
df>wn to the smallest dwarfs are includ(;d here. The 
rlifferent green, yellow and silvery hues characterize 
the foliage. Junipers jjosse.ss remarkable vigor and 
thrive in bleak and barren situations in poor, stony 
soils, in low, danq) grouml, and at the seashore. 
Common Spreading. .$1.00 
communis aurea (IlouKlas Golden). h . 1.00 
Plitzeriana. A beautiful variety, with light green 
foliage and spreading habit. 18 to 24 in. $1.50, 2.50 
Sabina (Savin Juniper). A tree with spreading 
habits, rarely erect. ^ Foliage dark green. Very 
valuable for rockeries, grouping and borders, 
18 to 24 in. $1.00, 24 to 30 in. 1.50 
Sabina Tamarisfoiia. A i)rostrate variety with 
fern-like foliage. Very unique. 15 to 18 in. . .. 1.00 
Schotti. Upright; a peculiarly bright green. 3 ft. 1.50 
Swedish (J. Succica). A dense growing columnar 
tree with shady, glaucous foliage. Considered 
more hardy than the Irish Juniper. 1 to 1^^ ft.. .50 
Virginiana (Rod Cedar). 2 ft. 50c., 4 ft. 1.00 
Virginiana glauca (Silvorv Red Cedar). 3 ft. 
$2.50, 4 ft.:. 3.50 
3.00 
3.00 
RETINISPORA. This grouj) is unusually attractive be¬ 
cause of the rernarkable biiglitness, delicacy and va¬ 
riety shown in its foliage tints, and because of the 
plea.sing feathery efTect of some varieties, affording a 
very desirable contrast in groups of evergreens. Tlu^y 
are vigorous growers that tlirive in most soils. Their 
coloring is constant and attractive at all seasons. Indi¬ 
vidual specimens may be grown to splendid propor¬ 
tions, and are at all times artistic ornaments to the 
lawn. 
aurea. (Golden Thread-branched Cypress).$2.50 
gracilis. Dwarf and very bushy, 2^ ft. 2.-50 
3 ft. 3.50 
plumosa (Plume-like Japanese Cj'press). 2 ft. 1.50 
3 ft. 2.50 
4 ft. 3.50 
plumosa aurea. Brilliantly golden throughout 
the sea.son. 2 ft. 1.50 
3 ft. 2.'50 
4 ft. T50 
6 ft. 4.50 
