Edcoard Gillett, Soulhwicl^, Mass. — Evergreens 
(>5 
Juniperus VirKinitiiia (see page 67) 
Kalrnia latifolia (see page 67) 
Vitis Labrusca, conlinucd 
Havor. Ripe in September or October. This is the 
edible grai>e of Xew England, and is improved by 
cultivation. 25 cts. each, S2 j)er doz. 
V. Labrusca alba. A native variety with white or 
flesh-colored berries. Plants 1 year old. 25 cts. 
Evergreen Shrubs 
and Trees 
Shrubs and Trees are too large for the mail and should go by freight or express. 
We do not prepay charges on Shrubs and Trees. 
ABIES alba (White Spruce). One to 2 feet. 80 cts. each; 2 to 23^ feet. 50 cts. each. 
A. Canadensis (Hemlock). A beautiful hardy evergreen, with graceful, drooping 
branches. Desirable for open, exposed places, growing often 50 feet high. It is 
also one of the very best for hedge-planting and stands almost any amount of 
trimming. 25 and 50 cts. 
A. balsamea (Balsam Fir). A tree with dark green leaves, a rapid grower, and well 
adapted for almost any place. It thrives in wet or boggy places, also on or near 
the tops of our higher New England mountains. 8 to 5 feet. 75 cts. each. 
A. concolor (White Silver Fir). This, according to Dr. C. S. Sargent, is found in its 
native habitat. California, Oregon, Southern Colorado, New Mexico, etc.; grows 
from 100 to 250 feet high, with a trunk 4 to 6 feet in diameter; withstands the 
heat and drought best of all the Firs; a rapid grower and quite desirable for 
cultivation in the eastern states; the leaves are long and showy. Plants about 
1 foot high, 50 cts. each. 
A. Douglasii. 1 to 2 feet high. 50 cts. each. 
A. nigra (Black Spruce). A dark evergreen tree, with short, stiff leaves. Can be 
grown in very wet ground. 25 cts. each. 
