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Vigorous Young Plants 
for Hurricane Replacement Plantings 
EVERGREENS (all balled and burlapped): 
White Spruces (Picea alba), 3 to 4 feet. 
Norway Spruces (Picea excelsa), 3 to 4 feet. 
Red Pines (Pinus resinosa), 21 to 3 feet. 
Scotch Pines (Pinus sylvestris), 2 to 21% feet. 
Austrian Pines (Pinus nigra), 2 to 2% feet. 
White Pines (Pinus strobus), 3 to 4 feet. 
Red Cedars (Juniperus virginiana), fine nursery-grown, 2 to 
3 and 3 to 4 feet. 
SHADE AND ORNAMENTAL TREES: 
Red (Swamp) Maples (Acer rubrum), 9 to 10 feet. 
Norway Maples (Acer platanoides), 8 to 10 feet. 
White Birches (Betula alba), 5 to 10 feet. 
Flowering Dogwood, White (Cornus florida), 3 to 8 feet. 
Flowering Dogwood, Pink, 2 to 4 feet. 
Kousa Dogwood (Cornus kousa), later blooming, 4 to 6 feet. 
European Beeches (Fagus sylvatica), 5 to 8 feet. 
Pin Oaks (Quercus palustris), 8 to 10 feet. 
SEEDLING PINES: 
Husky young transplants, not tiny seedlings but 5 to 6-year 
trees, excellent for planting on slopes, and for recreating wood- 
land groves. These will move with bare roots, and if handled 
with reasonable care will give excellent results at low cost. 
Japanese Black Pines, 1%to2 ft., per 100,$ 75.00. 
2to 214 ft., per 100, 100.00. 
Scotch Pines, 2 to 4 ft., per 100, $100.00. 
Red Pines, 2 to 3 ft., per 100, $75.00. 
cAbout ‘Planting in General 
ee main factors contribute largely to success 
with all plantings, large or small. 
1. Select the kind and grade of plants most suited to 
the proposed location, and best fitted to fulfill the 
desired purposes. 
2. Have the ground well prepared, before planting 
starts, with adequate good fertile soil to the full 
depth needed. 
3. See that new plants especially get the best of care, 
from the hour you receive them, during the actual 
planting, and all through the first growing season 
particularly. 
Making the right choices of kinds and quality of 
plants is important. If your conditions of soil and 
exposure are difficult, a reliable landscape consultant 
will save you time, money, and disappointment. 
Particularly in cases of severe sea-wind exposures, 
many kinds of plants that would be eminently suc- 
cessful in more sheltered spots simply cannot with- 
stand the almost.constant drying, salt-laden winds 
off the water. But there are kinds that will survive in 
such exposures. Japanese Black Pines and Rugosa 
Roses are two good’examples. We believe that our - 
long experience and gratifying success in sea-expos- 
ure planting enable us to give you sound and reli- 
able advice. 
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