


Nursery Grown Native Trees 
Maple, Striped 
A small, beautiful tree seldom reaching a height 
of more than 30 feet. Charming because of its 
large, light green leaves and its striped trunk. 
Native of the deep woods from Canada to Ten- 
nessee. 

Maple, Sugar 
This wonderfully stately tree with its pyramidal 
crown grows to a height of somewhat over 100 
feet with occasionally a trunk 5 feet in diameter. 
It is undoubtedly the most desirable of all Maples, 
beloved for its large, yellow or bright red foliage 
in autumn and prized for its delicious maple syrup. 
Transplants readily. This tree much prefers deep, 
fertile soil and ranges over the entire eastern part 
of the United States. 
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Sugar Maple 

































Mulberry, Red — 
The Red Mulberry is a small tree with a low, 
sweeping crown. Bears delicious, eatable fruit of 
a height of more than 50 or 60 feet. Prefers the & 
bottom lands. Ranges from central New York, 
southward throughout most of Florida. 
Oak, Black 
The Black Oak is sometimes called the Yellow 
Oak and is a distinguished and extremely hand- 
some tree with a more or less regular crown. It is 
one of the most showy and beautiful of the Oaks, 
growing sometimes 100 feet in height with dark, 
firmly ridged bark outside and distinctly yellowish 
within. Can be transplanted, but not readily as 
the Pin Oak. It ranges from central Maine to 
northern Georgia, westward to Texas and Minne- 
sota. 
Oak, Pin 
This particularly distinct variety of Oak is ex- 
tremely popular for street and lawn planting. It 
sometimes grows 70 to 80 feet in height; has a 
smooth bark and develops a single leader with a 
multitude of small branches whorled about this 
stem. It naturally grows in deep, rich soil on the 
banks of streams and ponds, but does extremely 
well in almost any environment. Ranges from cen- 
tral Pennsylvania to southern Tennessee, westward 
throughout most of Missouri. Transplants well 
almost any size. 
Shingle Oak Black Jack Oak Spanish Oak Chestnut Oak 
which the birds are extremely fond. Seldom attains {py 


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