Nursery Grown Native Trees 

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ry any. Bi 
lg) RED-BUD ie 2. 
US. . \ : 
This small, artistic, round-headed tree occasionally Pe . 7 : 
grows to a height of 45 feet. Its exquisite pro- é 
fusion of pink flowers form a beautiful contrast in ~—~.» Lt 
the early spring with the white flowers of the Dog- 
wood. It prefers rich, fertile ground and will grow 
either in the shade or in the open. Grows through- 
out most of Pennsylvania, southward along the 
Red-bud foothills to Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi, west- 
ward to Oklohoma, Kansas, and Nebraska. 
SOUR WOOD 
ne This rather irregularly crowned tree, which seems 
to actually blaze with color in the autumn, fre- 
quently grows to a height of 50 feet. It prefers 
fertile slopes. Transplants easily, and its use should 
ever increase. It has wonderful white blossoms and 
its brilliant fall foilage is unsurpassed. Grows from 
central Pennsylvania, westward to central Arkansas, 
southward to northern Florida and eastern Texas. 
ie 
Sour Wood SPRUCE, Red 
Normally considered a smaller tree but sometimes 
reaching the height of 100 feet with a trunk 3 feet 
in diameter. A beautiful and graceful tree growing 
naturally from Canada southward through Penn- 
sylvania, the mountains of West Virginia, Tennessee 
and North Carolina. Transplants safely. 
TULIP 
This stately tree grows tall and straight as an 
Indian with its erect trunk sometimes branchless to 
a height of 100 feet. It belongs to the Magnolia 
family and is one of our most magnificent flowering 
trees. From southern central New York to Florida 
and westward to the Mississippi, usually the tallest 
tree in the woods is the Tulip, frequently rising to 
a height of 180 to 190 feet with a trunk occasionally 
a, over 12 feet in diameter. 
A WALNUT, Black Sle 
i This splendid American giant frequently raises its _. UZ 2 
He crown to the height of 100 to 150 feet with a trunk™<£| qe 
Ne diameter of 5 to 6 feet. Grows from Massachusetts 4” 
@ and central New York, along the slopes of the = 
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Appalachin Mountains to Alabama, westward into 
Texas, and northward to Nebraska and Wisconsin. 
Black Walnut é 
Black Walnut Butternut 
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