Black Hills Spruce 
The Black Hills Spruce is hardiest of all Spruces, symmetrical, 
compact and bushy of growth, in fact, the very smallest trees grow 
round, sturdy, and compact. As the tree grows and develops, it con¬ 
tinues to carry this particular style of growth and generally becomes 
the most compact-growing specimen of the Spruce family; even in old 
trees the lower branches are retained, thus forming a close ground 
cover 
2 feet high Each: $1,75 - 2 for $3*00 
3 feet high Each: $2.50 - 2 for $4.50 
The Blue Colorado Spruces are without peer 
for ornamental purposes—as lawn specimens, 
as accents in the garden or border planting, or 
in pots for formal effect at the doorway or 
entrance. They are at their best with a group of 
other conifers possessing variations of the 
same color tone, such as the Silver Fir or the 
White, Englemann and Colorado Spruces-— 
or with a group of darker foliaged Douglas 
Firs, Pines or Hemlocks for contrast. 
Each tree offered is a 
selected Blue Shiner of 
dense pyramidal growth. 
Colorado Blue Spruce 
2 feet high 
3 feet high 
Each: $2.50 
Each: $3.75 
2 for $4.50 
2 for $6.75 
Pyramidal Arborvitae 
Pyramidal Arborvitae has become an essential part of 
almost all landscape plantings in the middle west. It furnishes the 
necessary tall narrow effects for foundation plantings, is a great 
favorite for entrances and is often seen in formal gardens or for 
markers in gardens of various kinds. 
3 feet high 
4 feet high 
Each: 
Each: 
J >2.00 
152.75 
2 for $3.50 
2 for $4.50 
American Hemlock 
“Most graceful of all Evergreens’’ k the title so often bestowed on 
the Hemlock. Certain it is that few Evergreens can claim the charms 
of this tree, both in youth and in its elder years. Its long branches 
droop gracefully to the ground, and the branchlets bend willingly to 
the breeze. 
3 feet high Each: #2.50 - 2 for #4.50 
4 feet high Each: $3.50 - 2 for $6.00 
