The Elm City Nursery Co., New Haven, Connecticut 
7 
M TO 
DECIDUOUS TREES. 
Each. 
Per 
10 . 
Per 
100 . 
3 to 
2 to 
1 to 
4 feet. 
3 feet. 
2 feet. 
Magnolia Soulangeana, one of 
Ike best of the early flowering 
Japan class. Our stock is all 
shipped zvith balls of earth about 
the roots, insuring their safe Irons, 
planting. 
Much lighter 3 to 4 feet, 
in color and 2 to 3 feet 
some 1 a rg e r 
than Soulange¬ 
ana, blooms at 
about the same 
time. 
MAGNOLIA STELLATA (Hall’s Early Japan), Specimens, 4 to 5 feet,$5.00 to 
MAGNOLIA 
MACROPIiYLLA 
Native mag¬ 
nolia with 
spreading habit. 
Leaves glauces- 
cent beneath 
and often two 
feet long. 
MAGNOLIA 
SOULANGEANA 
Specimens, 4 to 6 feet, $3.00 to 
This is the 3 to 4 feet, 
very well-known 2 to 3 feet, 
and more com¬ 
mon pink mag¬ 
nolia. It is a 
hybrid garden 
variety and very 
desirable. The 
pink cup-shaped 
flowers are very 
fragrant. 
MAGNOLIA 
SPECIOSA. 
Specimens, 4 to 6 feet, $3.00 to 
$ 2.00 
1.00 
.50 
6.00 
2.50 
2.00 
2 to 3 feet. 
1 to 2 feet. 
1 foot. 
6 to 
5 to 
5 to 
4 to 
3 to 
2 to 
Sorrel Tree or Oxydendrum Arboreum, 
a r are and beautiful native tree. 
$4.00 
22.00 | 
18.50 | 
6.00 
2.50 
2.00 
8 to 10 feet. 
4 to 6 feet. 
3 to 4 feet. 
2 to 3 feet. 
3 to 4 feet. 
Sometimes known as the Star-Magnolia. It is a shrub 
like tree seldom reaching a height of fifteen feet. 
Plants but a foot high will often bloom profusely. It is 
the first strictly hardy magnolia to bloom in the spring 
and its dainty but showy pure white flowers of delicate 
fragrance are always welcome. 
MAGNOLIA TRIPETALA (Umbrella Tree) . 
Very ornamental tree of spreading habit, large yellow 
green leaves and showy flowers. The fruit in the fall is 
very ornamental. 
MAGNOLIA YULAN OR CONSPICUA (Japan White) .. 
A rare magnolia of great beauty. 
MAIDEN HAIR TREE, see Ginkgo. 
MAPLE, see Acer. 
MAPLE JAPAN, see Acer Polymorphum. 
MORUS ALBA (Mulberry) Common white mulberry . 
MORUS ALBA VAR. PENDULA (Tea’s Weeping)..... Specimens, $1.50 to 
A weeping form grafted on stems 5 to 7 feet high. 
MORUS VAR. DOWNING . 
Rapid growth and beautiful foliage; large, black, edible 
fruits. 
MOUNTAIN ASH, see Sorbus. 
MULBERRY, see Morus. 
NYSSA SYLVATICA (Tulepo or Sour Gum) .. 1 to 
Also known as Pepperidge. Wonderfully attractive 
tree. 
OAK, see Quercus. 
ORANGE, see Aegle. 
OXYDENDRUM ARBOREUM (Tree Andromeda). 
A rare and charming native small tree or shrub, grace¬ 
ful in outline, foliage of a glossy green, turning to the 
most brilliant red imaginable in the fall. Can be kept in 
shrub form or allowed to assume the proportions of a 
small tree. Thrives in almost any location, even in the 
shade of larger trees. Its crowning glory, however, is its 
waxy-white lily-of-the-valley-like flowers, produced in ter- 
mina 1 panicles during July and August, when flowering 
trees are indeed 
rare. 
PAEONIA MOUTAN, 
see Deciduous Shrubs. 
PAULOWNIA 
IMPERIALIS 3 to 4 feet. 
PAVIA, see Aesculus. 
PEACH, Double 
Flowering, see 
Primus Persica. 
PHELLODENDRON 
AMURENSE (Cork 
Xree) .Specimens, $3.00 to 
Chinese tree 10 to 12 feet, 
with spreading. S to 10 feet, 
habit. Rapid 
grower and foli¬ 
age produces a 
very spicy odor 
when bruised. 
22.00 
18.50 
8 feet. 
6 feet 
6 feet. 
5 feet. 
4 feet. 
3 feet. 
15.00 
3.00 | 
25.00 
2.00 
18.50 
1.50 
12.00 
1.75 
15.50 
1.00 
7.50 
.75 
6.00 
.50 
4.00 
3.00 
1.00 
7.50 1 
5.00 
. 1 
I 
1.50 
1.00 
7.50 1 
.35 
3.00 
1.50 
13.50 
1.25 
11.25 
1.00 
9.00 
.75 
5.00 
15.00 
2.00 
1.50 
$80.00 
45.00 
4.00 
17.50 
12.50 
FOR SPECIAL DISCOUNTS SEE PAGE TWO. 
