Edward Gillette Southwick , Mass.—Evergreens 
71 
Juniperus Virginiana (see page 70) Picea pungens var. Kosteriana 
Picea pungens (Colorado Blue Spruce). A very hardy Spruce, with rather stiff 
branches. Foliage dense and varies in color from deep green to blue or silvery white. 
A very beautiful tree, sometimes found 150 feet high. 1 foot, 35 cts. ; $3.00 per doz. 
P. pungens, var. Kosteriana (Koster’s Blue, Grafted). Makes a fine specimen. 1£ to 
2 j feet, $1.25 each; 2\ to 3 feet, $2.50 each; $25.00 per doz. 
PINUS Strobus (White Pine). A tall, handsome tree, green all the year. A rapid 
grower, making a fine ornamental tree. Plants 2 feet high; 50 cts. each; $5.00 per 
doz.; 3 feet, 75 cents each; $7.50 per doz. 
RETINOSPORA plumosa. (Japan Cypress). Evergreen tree, desirable for lawns 
well protected from winds. We get fine sprays and colors in this choice Cypress. 
1 J to 2 feet, 50 cts. each; $5.00 per doz. 
R. plumosa aurea. A variety of the above, with the leaves golden tinted. Very 
thrifty. 1 to 1$ feet, 35 cts. each; $3.50 per doz. 
RHODODENDRON punctatum. A hardy species, flowering when but 2 or 3 feet high, 
bearing pretty rose-colored flowers spotted within. Small plants. 1 foot, 30 cts. 
each; $3.00 per doz. 
R. Catawbiense. This is the very best of our native rhododendrons, being perfectly 
hardy in New England and bearing in June large clusters of lilac-purple flowers. It 
forms symmetrical bushes 4 to 6 feet high and for mass planting it has no equal. 1 to 
