EVERGREENS 
From the background to perennial border evergreens 
play a dominant, permanent role in your garden. White 
flowers are at their best when grown against a backdrop of 
upright juniper, arborvitae, hemlock or yew. Grouped at 
the end of a long axis or planted on property lines and 
combined with flowering trees, spruce, pine and fir serve to 
frame either a vista or the garden as a whole. 
Junipers and yews, both upright and trailing, to- 
gether with mugho pines contribute accents of year round 
green between masses of low shrubs banked against house 
walls. Yew, hemlock, Douglas fir add shade to shade for 
they will grow beneath a high canopy of oak leaves. 
With evergreens the possibilities are many. 
You can be assured that all our evergreens are dug 
with a generous ball of earth and burlapped. 
WHITE FIR (Abies concolor) 
A tall, worthwhile evergreen with graceful branches. Demands 
a well-drained location and moisture. 
oy 4ettaenigho...". each $4.00 Tee 1G Neeser each 12.00 
Ay dattoenip ly 2... each 5.50 379% fe inal ato each 15.00 
DAGti Gre BIG Ti oese.s.: each 7.00 97 tO highs Se each 20.00 
OVARY Cet Ved ee each 9.00 10/12 ft high ea 25.00 to 30.00 
DOUGLAS FIR (Pseudotsuga douglasi) 
A handsome and hardy conical-shaped evergreen effective either 
as a specimen or in groups. Needless bluish-green. Reaches a 
height of two hundred feet in its native state. Tolerates con- 
siderable shade. Illustrated on the following page. 
OAAuiGA teh... each $2.00 TSOP Ath Dis Hee each 9.50 
374-ter high. 2-.... each 302,50 S79etiee highs. each 12.50 
4/5 fee high:...... each 3.50 0/10 tev hivhie: each 15.00 
S/ Gutahieh.. each = 5:50 10/12 ft high ea 17.50 to 20.00 
6/7 ft. high......each 7.50 12/15 ft high ea 20.00 to 30.00 
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