


















The architecture of the house 
helps to determine the planting 
that belongs at the entrance. The 
doorway of the home of Mr. and 
Mrs. J. Rives Worsham is made all 
the more attractive by this group 
of Pfitzer’s juniper, cypress, and 
boxwood. 

GREENBRIER FARMS, 
INC. 
In the garden of Mrs. H. H. 
Pankratz, in Norfolk, some small 
ornamental shrubs and flowering 
trees are thriving. As in many gar- 
dens of this vicinity, holly trees 
grow luxuriantly. Such specimens 
as the dogwoods, flowering crab- 
apples, and Oriental cherries offer a 
great deal to the gardener whose 
space is limited. For besides their 
early burst of bloom that domi- 
nates the spring garden picture, 
they provide decorative and wel- 
come foliage all summer and gay 
fruits in the autumn. All these 
small trees are especially valuable 
to the owner of a little home, for 
they are more in scale with small 
buildings. 


