22 
DUNDEE NURSERY. 
PIN US PON DEROSA, OF COLORADO. 
Heavy wooded Pine, a rapid grower, forming a tree of great size. Bark 
reddish and foliage longer and coarser than the Red or Norway Pine. A valu¬ 
able tree for the west and northwest. 
DWRAF MOUNTAIN PINE _—Finns Montana. 
It is a bautiful little tree or bush, foliage very dense and of a rich, dark 
green; very valuable for ornamental purposes. It is perfectly hardy in the 
most exposed situations. 
eJUNIPER UIRGINIAN. 
Red Cedar. —A well known American tree. It varies much in habit and 
color of foliage. It succeeds well on the plains of Nebraska and Kansas, where 
other evergreens fail. It is very desirable for ornamental purposes; also for 
wind breaks, shelter belts and hedges. 
AMERICAN ARBORUITAE .—Thuya Occidentalis. 
A handsome tree of regular and symmetrical habits. Growth thick and 
bushy; one of the best and most useful evergreens; excellent for screens and 
hedges. 
PYRAMIDAL ARBORUITAE. 
A superb, new and hardy sort, of very comoacf habit; much better than 
the Irish Juniper, and growing in a perfect column; rare and beautiful. Large¬ 
ly planted in cemeteries, owing to the small amount of space it occupies. This 
is perhaps the most valuable Arborvitae in cultivation. 
THE EUROPEAN LARCH. 
Is the greatest timber tree in Europe, combining rapid growth with great 
durability, extreme hardiness, adaptability to any variety of soil not too wet, 
and remarkably free from disease. It is also. ve r y desirable as an ornamental 
tree, its conical shape, regular, delicate branches, and soft, light green leaves, 
making a striking contrast to the different varieties of European and ornamen¬ 
tal trees. Thrives well in Minnesota and the Dakotas. 
XJSBFUL^ RULES. 
TO GET THE NUMBER OF TREES OR PLANTS REQUIRED FOR AN ACRE. 
Divide the number of square feet in an acre (43,560) by the number of 
square feet each plant occupies. This is obtained by multiplying the distance 
between the rows by the distance between the plants. For example: Apple 
trees planted 33x16A feet gives each tree 544 A square feet, or eighty trees to 
the acre. 
NUMBER TO THE ACRE. 
3 feet apart each 
4 “ “ “ 
v ay. 
6 ( 
. 4,840 
2,722 
6 “ “ 
$ ( 
6 C 
1,2 IO 
8 “ “ 
( 6 
. £ £ 
680 
16 68 
( ( 
( (, 
170 
20 “ 55 
16^x33 feet 
ll . 5 S 
apaft each way * ,, 
* * 
« 9 0 S 9 9*9 
* * ■* 9 » 9 
/ 
. 108 
, 80 
