KELSEY’S 
Hardy American Plants 
Rhododendrons and Azaleas 
Catalog of BOXFORD NURSERY 
EVERGREEN TREES AND SHRUBS (continued) 
plantings for New England conditions, giving an effect some¬ 
what like the Italian cypress. 
As a background for rhododendrons, shrubbery and flowers, 
it is unequalled, except perhaps by the Carolina hemlock. 
It does not take the place of other evergreens, but holds a 
unique place for certain effects, and no other evergreen can 
take its place. Individuals vary in color from light and dark 
green to steel-blue. 
We offer hundreds of transplanted specimens up to 20 feet 
in height. We also collect specimens with large balls in 
car-lots or less at prices according to selection, ordinarily 
75 cents a foot in height. 
Each 10 100 1,000 
Juniperus virginiana eiegantissima. 
3 to 4 ft. 2 00 
virginiana glauca. Blue Virginia Cedar. 
1% to 2 ft. 1 50 12 50 
2 to 3 ft. 2 50 
3 to 4 ft. 3 50 
virginiana globosa. 1 to 1*6 ft. 1 50 
1% to 2 ft. 2 00 
virginiana schotti. 1 to 1% ft. 1 25 
2 to 3 ft. . 
Kalmia angustifolia. 
6 to 12 in. 
22 50 
30 00 
2 00 IS 00 
Narrow-leaved Laurel. 
. 35 3 00 
20 00 
V a T m * lofrifrdin The Mountain Laurel. One of the 
xvaiinia. laiiioiid. grandest of our native broad-leaved 
evergreen shrubs, attaining tree-like proportions in our 
southern mountains. In cultivation it is a broad, thick 
shrub, and, when in full bloom, of surpassing beauty. 
The wfceel-shaped flowers i* close terminal corymbs, 
pure white to pink, appear in May or June in such pro¬ 
fusion as almost to smother the foliage. Its thick, 
shining leaves, conspicuous the year round, make it a 
shrub of greatest value for massing. The hardiness of 
Kalmia latifolia is beyond doubt, it being found spar¬ 
ingly in Nova Scotia and increasingly in abundance 
through New England and the middle Atlantic states 
(particularly in the higher altitudes), till the crest of 
the southern Alleghanies is reached. 
This Is another of my specialties and my stock is 
unequalled elsewhere. 
Each 10 100 1,000 
1 to 1*6 ft. 60 5 00 40 00 
1% to 2 ft. 80 7 00 60 00 
2 to 3 ft. 1 50 12 00 110 00 
3 to 9 in. clumps . 75 6 00 50 00 
9 to 12 in. clumps. 1 00 8 00 75 00 700 00 
1 to 1*6 ft. clumps.... 1 25 
10 00 
1% to 2 ft. clumps- 2 00 17 50 
2 to 3 ft. clumps. 3 50 
3 to 4 ft. clumps . 4 50 
90 00 800 00 
150 00 
32 50 300 00 
40 00 375 00 
I purnlTinf* Grows 3 to 8 feet. Few shrub- 
L.euCOtnoe catesoaei. ovcr g reens of the broad-leaved 
sort have the grace of this one. The thick, shining 
green leaves are evenly disposed on long, recurved 
brandies, with dense racemes of beautiful, white, bell- 
slmped flowers. As an under-shrub or for banks and 
the borders of rhododendron masses or along streams 
It is without a rival. The sprays make beautiful win¬ 
ter decorations indoors, turning a rich bronze in the 
fall where exposed to the sun. 
Each 
10 
100 
6 to 12 in. 
$4 
00 
$30 00 
1 to 1*6 ft. 
7 ;> 
6 
50 
60 
00 
1% to 2 ft. 
1 
50 
12 
50 
110 
00 
The larger sizes of Leucothoe , 
are 
heavy elm 
immediate effect. 
Pachysandra terminalls. 
Each 
10 
100 
6 to 9 in. 
25 
1 
75 
15 
00 
Plcea alba (canadensis). White 
Spruce. 
2 to 3 ft. 
1 
25 
10 
00 
3 to 4 ft. 
2 
00 
17 
50 
160 
00 
4 to 5 ft. 
3 
50 
30 
00 
5 to 6 ft. 
4 
50 
40 
00 
6 to 7 fit. 
7 
00 
60 
00 
7 to 8 ft. 
9 
00 
SO 
00 
S to 10 ft. 
12 
00 
100 
00 
10 to 12 ft. 
15 
00 
alba a urea. 7 to S ft. 
20 
00 
alba glauca (Dwarf form). 
1*6 ft. 
3 
00 
25 
00 
4 ft. 
5 
00 
40 
00 
alcocklana. 3 to 4 ft. 
1 
25 
12 
00 
1,000 
1,000 
4 
