Evergreens 
ALL KINDS 
and SIZES 
Listed Under Common Names in the Next 7 Pages 
W E REFER to coniferous evergreens (with needles) only. Broadleaf ever¬ 
greens on pages 6 to 11. Evergreens for special use, as Christmas tree grow¬ 
ing, forestry, young grafts for nursery planting, pages 3 to 6. Hedges, page 43. 
A fine young Hemlock specimen 
AMERICAN HEMLOCK 
The Einest Native Evergreen 
(iooil rich, dark green winter and summer, 
grows in sun or shade, in damp soil as well 
as ordinary gardens. Ueadily pruia'd, lor 
dwarfing or in hedges. I^asily aiul safely 
transplantc'd. 
Listed and priced on pages 20 ami LI 
PRICES AND COST 
The prices listed are for nursery grown 
trees, properly transplanted, larger sizes with 
hall of earth, dug and ready to ship. Packing 
is included on plants without hall of earth, 
hut not included on larger, heavier sizes. It 
may amount to ahont 10%. Cost of freight 
and express on small sizes is very little, but on 
plants with a hall, and over 2 feet, it is a 
heavy expense, since a 50 pound evergreen 
may sell for as low as $1.50, the express might 
be 50c or more depending on distance. We 
recommend freight and allow 40% above list 
for packing and transportation. 
For this reason (transport) we often omit a 
price per each on larger evergreens. IVIake up 
your list and we will gladly quote. In this 
way we can give you the lowest price— 
considerably less than if we had to publish 
and stick to an arbitrary figure for all circum¬ 
stances. 
HFMFMBEll: Small sizes are inexpensive 
to .ship by express. 
COLORED EVERGREENS 
Abies concolor (silver) 
Cedrus atlantica glauca (silver) 
Chamaecyparis lawson. Tr. of B. (blue) 
Chamaecyparis pisifera aurea (gold) 
Chamaecyparis filifera aurea (gold) 
Chamaecyparis plurnosa aurea (gold) 
Chamaecyparis veitchii (silver) 
.luniperus chinensis column (gray) 
Juniperus chinensis Pfitzer (silvery) 
.luniperus chinensis Sargent (silvery) 
.luniperus communis depress (yellow) 
.1 uniperus communis Hibernica (gray) 
.luniperus excelsa stricta (blue) 
.luniperus horizont. Douglas (bluish) 
.1 uniperus horizont. plurnosa (purple) 
Juniperus virginiana glauca (blue) 
Picea engelmanni (steel-blue) 
Picea excelsa aurea (yellow) 
Picea pungens glauca, etc. (blue) 
Pinus Koriana glauca (bluish) 
Pinus parviflora glauca (blue) 
Pinus sylvestr. Watereri (blue) 
Thuja Occident. Douglas aur. (gold) 
Thuja occidentalis lutea (yellow) 
Thuja orientalis aurea nana (gold) 
Four Dwarfs for Your Doorway 
Variety of form and color, and real dwar* 
growing plants that remain hashes, not great 
trees to hide yonr house; from view! ((Jf 
course, you need two sets of plantings to 
balance one on each side of the conventional 
doorway.) 
These are honest, fiill-vahie plants— 
not mere eatch-hargains! 
Suggested Planting 
List 
1. Spreading Yew—Selected 15- 
inch spread. $ 2.00 
2. Pfitzer Juniper—Heavy 18-inch 
spread. 3.00 
3. M iigho Pine—Low, dense, 15- 
inch spread. 2.00 
4. Upright Ye>v—2 feet. 3.00 
Careful boxing. 2.50 
(Weight about 150 lbs.) — 
$12.50 
OFFKK: All four for $11.50. 
OFFldl: Double the above sizes; also boxed, 
weight 300 lbs. All four for $27.50. 
'I'he above are as fine quality as evergreens 
can be grown. Guaranteed to please yon. All 
dug with ball of earth. 
Above — Upright Jap¬ 
anese Yew. Listed on 
page 24. 
Left — Spreading Jap¬ 
anese Yew. Shear long 
end shools to keep it 
dense. 
Pfitzer Juniper—Silver cloud in spring and 
good green leaves in winter. Compact and semi¬ 
dwarf. Listed on page 21 
Mugho Pine — Tight, compact clump of green. 
Shear new growth candles in half every other 
spring to keep it dense. Listed on page 23. 
17 
(CONIFERS) EVERGREENS (pases 17 to S4) — SMALL SIZES (paac 4) — HEDGES (page 43) 
