EVERGREEN TREES 
29 
No Evergreen is Better for Mass Planting than the Hemlock 
TSUGA diversifolia. 
SMALL-LEAVED JAPANESE HEMLOCK. 
Same graceful habit as American form, but 
with diminutive needles and distinctive con Per 10 
2 to 2V 2 ft.Each $4 50 $36 00 
T. Sieboldii. 
JAPANESE HEMLOCK. Of somewhat stiffer 
habit than our American Hemlock; deep 
green glossy foliage; most decorative as a 
specimen. 
2 . to 2 y 2 
ft. 
$6 00 48 00 
2% to 3 
ft. 
7 50 60 00 
3 to 3Y 2 
ft. 
8 50 67 50 
3% to 4 
ft. 
10 00 80 00 
4% to 5 
ft. 
12 50 
7 to 9 
ft. 
25 00 
ailed 
and Bur] 
lapped 
—'‘B & 
T HE prime essential of success in transplanting trees and 
shrubs is that they have -a system of fine fibrous roots 
which are obtained at Andorra by frequent transplanting 
and pruning. Most deciduous trees and shrubs when they drop 
their leaves are in a dormant state,, and do not require the 
same degree of care in handling as the evergreen trees which 
always bear their leaves, and so are always exposed to Untoward 
conditions of drought and wind. To insure the success of our 
evergreens in shipping, their compact balls of fine fibrous roots 
are carefully lifted from the ground still surrounded by the 
damp protecting soil in which they grew, and securely wrapped 
in burlap, so that they are never exposed to the danger of dry¬ 
ing out in shipment, and they will reach the purchaser in per¬ 
fect condition. 
