1 Cl Hardy American Plants 
O Rhododendrons and Azaleas 
Catalog of BOXFORD NURSERY 
Juniperus communis depressa and Juniperus virginiana (Red Cedar) 
In the rear are specimen Red Cedars, such as we can supply in large 
quantities. In front are three forms of the variety J. depressa, prostrate, 
ascending and erect. This is the finest carpeting evergreen we have. 
EVERGREEN TREES AND SHRUBS, continued 
Juniperus sablna tamariscifolia. Gray Carpet Each 10 100 
Juniper. 6 to 12 in.SO 50 $4 00 $30 00 
1H to 2 ft. 1 25 10 00 
Juniperus virginiana. oo s oo 40 oo 
2 to 3 ft. 1 00 8 00 
3 to 4 ft. 1 50 12 00 100 00 
4 to 5 ft. 2 00 18 00 
5 to 0 ft. 3 00 27 50 
7 to 8 ft. 6 00 50 00 
Larger specimens up to 20 ft. at special prices. 
BOXFORD NURSERY mnkes a specialty of the Red Cedar. It is, we 
boliovo, the finest of all evergreens for formal plantings for New England 
conditions, giving an cfTcct somewhat like the Italian cypress. 
As a background for rhododendrons, shrubbery and flowers, it is un¬ 
counted, except perhaps by the Carolina hemlock. It does not take the 
plnco 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. 
Wo offer hundreds of transplanted specimens up to 20 feet in height. 
Wo also collect specimens with largo halls in car-lots or less at prices 
according to selection, ordinarily 75 cents a foot in height. 
Each 10 100 
Juniperus virginiana elegantlssima. 3 ft.$1 75 
virginiana giauca. Blue Virginia Cedar. 
1 to 1H ft. 1 25 $10 00 
1 Vt to 2 ft. 1 50 12 50 
virginiana globosa. 1 ft. 1 75 
virginiana schotti. 1H to 2 ft . 1 50 12 00 
virginiana tripartita. 1H to 2 ft. 1 50 12 00 
Kalmla angustifolia. Narrow-leaved Laurel. 
0 to 12 in. 35 3 00 $20 00 
1 to l % ft., “collected” clumps. 50 4 00 30 00 
giauca. 0 to 12 in. 35 3 00 
fCalrrua latifnlin The Mountain Laurel. One of the grandest 
gyanina. mm mm. of 0ljr native broad-leaved evergreen shrubs, 
attaining trcc-liko proportions in our southern mountains. In culti¬ 
vation it is a broad, thick shrub, and, when in full bloom, of sur¬ 
passing beauty. The wheel-shaped flowers in close terminal corymbs, 
pure white to pink, appear in May or June in such profusion 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 latilolia is beyond doubt, it being found 
E aringly in Nova Scotia and increasingly in abundance through New 
lgland 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 unequaled 
elsewhere. 
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