NURSERY DEPARTMENT,__ 
F OR a complete list of material normally found under this heading, 
we must refer our customers to our Spring 1938 Catalogue of Nursery 
Stock which was mailed to our regular customers last spring, and 
the following lists which we publish: 
No. 1. Trained Fruit Trees. For planting against walls or trellises. These 
trees bear at a younger age than ordinary trees. 
No. 2. Hybrid and Species Lilacs. 90 varieties. 
No. 3. Azalea Pontica Hybrids and A. rustica. This class includes the most 
gorgeous of all deciduous Azaleas. By selecting varieties carefully, 
they can be had in bloom for five weeks—some being early, some 
midseason, and some late, and all flowering after the general dis¬ 
play of evergreen Azaleas has gone by. They are very hardy and 
will do well in full sun or partial shade. 
No. 4. Nectarines, Peaches, Figs, Grapes for Greenhouse Forcing. 
No. 3. French Hydrangeas and Spireas for Forcing under Glass. 
Copies of the Catalogue or any of these lists will be mailed to anyone 
interested. Our Nurseries contain not only all the well-known material 
ordinarily in demand, but we have hundreds of varieties of new and rare 
things generally unobtainable. 
If you cannot fill your wants from our Catalogues or lists, write us; 
we may have a few plants of just what you are looking for. We wish 
especially to call your attention to the finest of all hedge material, the 
splendid Taxus shown on page 6. 
HYBRID RHODODENDRONS. The colored picture below shows a mixed planting of 
- Rhododendron on a sloping bank. Anyone with similar 
space can duplicate this lovely picture with B. & A. Hybrid Rhododendrons at a surprisingly low price. 
Rhododendrons are attractive all the year round, as in addition to their glorious flowers their broad-leaved 
evergreen foliage is always pleasing, especially in winter. 
