DuycArpum (Silver Maple) 
ptaUnoia** (Norway Maple) 
Saccbarum (Sugar Maple) 
SHADE TREE BARGAIN 
A special small, healthy, nurser\ 
grown, transplanted size of sort; 
which can be relied upon to plan' 
easily. An amazing value here! 
RED MAPLE (Acer rubrum) and 
SUGAR MAPLE (Acer saccharum) 
These two maples in straight tree; 
slightly branched. no) (ioo) 
4 to 6 feet.$5.50 $45.01 
6 to 8 feet. 8.50 G5.0C 
FLOWERING DOGWOOD (Cornus) 
Fine young stock, beginning tc 
branch and well rooted. 
2 to 4 feet.$6.00 $30.00 
4 to 6 feet.10.00 75.0C 
6 to 8 feet.15.00 125.00 
RED OAK (Quercus rubra) and 
WHITE OAK (Quercus alba) 
These two Oaks are clean, straight, 
extra good roots. 
2 to 4 feet.$5 00 $40.00 
4 to 6 feet. 8.50 65.00 
SHADE TREES 
ACER 
(Maple) BIRCHES 
(Betula) 
Dasycarpum (Silver Maple) 
100 ft. Zone IV. Good quick shade. 
Leaves bright silver below. 
(Each) (10) (100) 
* 2 to 3 ft.$ 5.00 
4 to 5 ft. $ 3.00 11.00 
6 to 8 ft.$1-00 6.00 35.00 
Palmatum (Japanese Maple) 
20 ft. Zone V. Graceful, bushy. Green. 
2 to 3 ft.$1.10 $ 7.00 $ 45.00 
—atropurpureum (Red-Leaved). 10 ft. 
Wine-red leaves. Bushy, compact. Any 
sheltered soil. In time, becomes an 
open tree-like shrub, always neat. Nat¬ 
ural-looking, except for color. 
* 8 in. grafts.$ .90 $ 7.50 $ 70.00 
15 in. grafts. 1.25 11.00 100.00 
24 in. 5-yr. grafts. 3.25 28.00 .... 
Platanoides (Norway Maple) 
60 ft. Zone IV. Dense, round-headed. 
Excellent for city streets. Easily 
grown. Bad in gardens, because of 
greedy roots. 
*12 to 18 in.$ 7.50 
4 ft. X.$ 4.50 30.00 
5 ft. X....$1.00 6.00 40.00 
10 ft. 2.50 22.00 190.00 
12 ft. 3.00 27.00 250.00 
* 3 
* 4 
8 
10 
to 
to 
to 
to 
Rubrum (Red or Swamp Maple) 
80 ft. Zone TV. Majestic drooping pyra¬ 
mid. Red flowers in April. Wet land, 
but tolerant of drainage. Not as greedy 
roots as most Maples. 
* 2 to 3 ft. 
4 to 6 ft. 
6 to 8 ft.$1.50 
$ 1.75 $ 9.00 
5.00 45.00 
8.50 65.00 
Saccharum (Sugar Maple) 
100 ft. Zone III. Hates city air. Heavy 
dense, regular pyramid. Autmn color. 
The most effective country landscape 
shade tree there is. Bold and dark 
at a distance. 
* 2 to 4 ft. 
4 to 6 ft. 5.50 45.00 
6 to 8 ft.$1.50 8.50 65.00 
12 to 14 ft. 4.75 40.00 310.00 
Ornamental leaf and bark, suited to 
informal, “woodsy” plantings. 
Alba laciniata 
30 ft. Zone III. Drooping branches 
and lacy, drooping leaves. Superb on a 
lawn. „ 
(Each) (10) (100) 
* 3 to 4 ft.$15.00 $120.00 
6 to 8 ft.$4.00 35.00 295.00 
Papyrifera (Canoe or Paper Birch) 
80 ft. Zone I. Whitest bark of all, but 
yellowish when young. Handsome. 
* 2 to 3 ft.$ l0 -00 
* 4 to 6 ft.$ 7.50 65.00 
6 to 8 ft.$2.50 10.00 90.00 
Populifolia (Gray Birch) 
30 ft. Zone III. The common clump of 
“white” birch in woods. Poor soil. 
* 2 to 3 ft.$ 9.00 
6 to 8 ft.$2.50 $10.00 75.00 
BIRCH IN 
CLUMPS 
We suggest Paper 
or Gray Birch, 3 or 4 
set close as possible 
in a common hole. 
This is best and cheap¬ 
est way of getting 
clumps. 
CASTANEA 
(Chestnut) 
$ 2.25 $ 9.00 very different. 
Mollissima (Chinese Chestnut) 
55 ft. Zone V. Bushy tree, practically 
immune to blight. Good nuts. See also 
page 24. No majestic giant like our 
vanished native, but sweet nuts, not 
* 6 to 12 in. S. 
*18 to 24 in. X. 
(Each) (10) (100) 
.$ 18.00 
.$ .85 $ 7.00 $ 55.00 
18 
