DUNDEE NURSERY, 
1 1 
WHITE PINE -P. Strobus. 
It is the most ornamental of all our native pines. Foliage light, delicate, 
silvery green. Flourishes in the dryest, poorest soil; easily transplanted. 
SCOTCH PINE.— Pinus Sylvestris. 
A rapid growing, hardy variety, with stout, erect shoots, and silvery green 
foliage. Valuable for shelter and makes a good lawn tree, and being one of 
the hardiest ot the evergreen family, it readily adapts itself to the trying cli¬ 
mate of Minnesota, the Dakotas and Montana. It also thrives well an the dry 
plains of Kansas, and is perfectly at home in Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska and 
other states. 
AUSTRIAN PINE: OR BLACK PINE.-P- Austriaca syn. Nigricans. 
A remarkably robust, hardy, spreading tree, leaves long, stiff and dark 
green; rapid grower; valuable for this country. 
PINUS PON DEROSA, OF COLORADO. 
Heavy wooded Pine, a rapid grower, forming a tree of great size. Hark 
reddish and foliage longer and coarser than the Red or Norway Pine. A valu¬ 
able tree for the west and northwest. 
DWARF MOUNTAIN PI NE.—Him.s 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. 
cJUNIPER UIRGINIAN. 
Red Cedar. — A well known American tree. It varies much in habit and 
color of foliage. It succeeds well on tne pLins 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 Occicu italis. 
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 compact 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 very 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. 
