C. pisifera dumosa. 12 in. A squat silvery fluffy cushion. 75c. 
C. p. filifera nana. 12 in. A light sea-green tight mound. 75c. 
C. p. squarrosa pygmaea. 5 in. Low flat-topped silvery bush bearing 
juvenile and intermediate foliage and slow-growing. 75c. 
Cryptomeria japonica nana. 18 in. Globular twisted branches clothed in 
dark green sharp needle leaves. 50c - $1.00. 
Juniperus communis compressa. 1% ft. A slender compact gray spire; 
very slow-growing. $1.25. 
+ J. c. montana. A beautiful form; prostrate, slow-growing, silvery- 
blue. 50c. 
+ J. horizontalis. The most beautiful lavender-green carpet that is like 
an encrustation wherever it grows. 50c. 
‘+ Picea albertiana conica. 2 ft. A pyramidal light green fluffy little 
tree. 75c - $2.50. 
Note: The International Congress on Nomenclature has authorized the 
earlier name Picea Abies instead of Picea excelsa. Hornibrook in his 
second edition of “Dwarf and Slow-Growing Conifers” conforms to 
this and so must we. 
Picea Abies capitata. A stiffly branched slow-growing round topped bush. 
New. $1.50. 
P. A. Gregoriana Parsonsiil. The original stock was sold to us as P. A. 
Clanbrasiliana. Quite possibly our determination is incorrect. Plant 
makes a low rounded mound, flexible and soft to the touch. One of 
the most attractive of this group. Small plants $1.00. 
P. A. nana. An exceedingly slow-growing small tree with strong ascend- 
ing branches, achieving 3 ft. in 35 years. Rare. Small plants $1.50. 
Picea A. procumbens. A shiny sharp-needled flat-topped bush achieving 
a height of 9 in. increasing in width much faster than in height. The 
flattened top makes it a proper bush for the higher windswept reaches 
of the rock garden. $1.50. 
P. A. pumila. Very similar to above. $1.50. 
P. A. repens. More sparsely branched, stiffer and more open in habit. 
$1.50. 
‘+ Tsuga canadensis nana. Very deliberate in growth; a dense flat to 
rounded cushion; the young leaves folded and golden; an attractive 
spot of mellow color. Small plants $1.00-$1.50. 
‘** Tsuga c. pendula. It is very interesting that all the plants in the 
world came from four plants found on Fishkill Mountain in 1870. 
Eventually grows into a large dome-shaped bush of weeping habit and 
soft blue-green foliage. Small plants 75c. 
—— 22 oo 
