40 
SHERWOOD NURSERY CO., Portland, Oregon 
Thymus vulgaris 
Small, fragrant, evergreen plant, having a spread of 1 to 2 feet. Leaves are 
small, and the foliage is so dense that the plants appear as masses of dark 
green foliage. The flowers are light lavender and grow on numerous spikes 
3 to 6 inches in height. An excellent plant for garden borders and rockeries. 
Grows into a nice, shapely plant in a season or two, and releases its spicy 
fragrance with the slightest disturbance. Not positive as to name. 
Each 
2- 4 inches 
4- 6 . 
6 - 8 . 
8-10 . 
once 
>> 
transplanted. $- 
8-10 
$- 
10 
$ 
.B&B 
.20 
1.80 
....B&B 
.25 
2.25 
....B&B 
.30 
2.70 
100 
4 
5 
6 
7 
$- 
1000 
40 
48 
56 
Tsuga canadensis (Canada Hemlock) 
^ Native New Brunswick, Wisconsin and south to Alabama. A well known 
conifer of graceful, pleasing habit of growth, and regarded by some land¬ 
scape architects as one of the best of conifers. Perfectly hardy, withstanding 
low temperature wdthout injury to tree or foliage. Foliage is heavy and 
attractive, needles are short. Is naturally broadly pyramidal in form but can 
be grown to a rounded head, and lends itself well to pruning into hedges. 
2- 4 inches twice transplanted.— . 5 
4- 6 .. .”.”.”. 6 48 
6- 8 ....”.”.”. 7 56 
8-10 .. .”.”.”. 8 . 
Twinflower—See Llnnaea 
Umbellularla callfornlca (Oregon Myrfle) (California Laurel) 
A handsome hardy evergreen tree, 25 to 30 feet in height and reaching 75 
feet. Native of southern Oregon and northern California where it reaches its 
greatest perfection of growth along the streams and valleys of the Coast 
Range. The tree is conical in form and the leaves are highly aromatic. Well 
adapted to hedges. Sargent has described the Myrtle as “one of the stateliest 
and most beautiful inhabitants of North American Forests, and no evergreen 
tree of temperate regions surpasses it in the beauty of its dark dense crown 
of lustrous foliage.” 
2- 4 inches once transplanted. . 5 
4- 6 ... ”.”.”. 6 
Vacclnlum ovatum (Evergreen Huckleberry) 
First discovered by the Lewis and Clark expedition at the mouth of the 
Columbia river in 1805. One of the great beauties of the plant is the thick, 
waxy leaves, of blended shades of green in spring and summer, and changing 
to a mixture of deep crimson and bronze in fall and winter. Its winter and 
spring colors utterly defy description. It is a rounded plant, many branched 
and of unusual density. Strong, vigorous grower, and stands unlimited shear¬ 
ing. Can be sheared into a hedge from 1 to 5 feet tall. Does well in either 
sun or shade, but is at its best in sunny exposures. A hardy evergreen shrub 
of surpassing merit and a fine hedge plant. 
2- 4 inches twice transplanted. . 6 48 
4- 6 ....”.”.”. 7 56 
6- 8 . 
J) 
n 
8 
64 
8-10 . 
>> 
9 
72 
10-12 . 
>) 
>> 
10 
80 
12-15 . 
>) 
>> 
. 11 
