QUEEN PALM 
Cocos plumosus, Queen Palm. Beautiful feather palm with long 
arching leaves and tall slender smooth trunk. Popular now as a 
street tree. Hardy to about 18°. 
LOQUAT 
Eriobotyra japonica, Loquat. Although essentially a fruit tree prized 
for its pear-like fruits in early summer, this round headed tree with 
dark green leaves is often desirable in the background planting. 
Long leathery leaves, woolly beneath, give a feeling of permanence 
to the garden. 
EUCALYPTUS or GUM TREES 
Eucalyptus citriodora, Lemon-scented Gum. Tall growing tree with 
graceful crown of long narrow lemon-scented leaves and picturesque 
white trunk. 
Eucalyptus ficifolia, Scarlet Flowering Gum. Low growing dwarf 
flowering tree. Large pointed leaves of dark green and great clus- 
ters of crimson or scarlet flowers. One of the showiest varieties of 
Eucalyptus. 20°. 
Eucalyptus globulus, Blue Gum. Rapid growing tree with broad 
blue leaves later turning deep green. Much planted for windbreaks 
and a source of firewood. 
Compact Blue Gum. Dwarf bushy tree forming a symmetrical head 
without a main trunk. 
Other standard and novelty varieties available. 
EVERGREEN ASH 
Fraxinus uhdei. An evergreen Ash from Mexico makes a slender, 
tall tree of medium size. It is always refined in habit and neat in 
appearance. The leaves are a foot and a half long and are composed 
of many glossy green leaflets. Hardy. 
SILK OAK 
Grevillea robusta, Silk Oak. Large tree with pyramidal, narrow 
crown of fern-like foliage lightened in early summer with masses 
of fluffy golden yellow flowers. Fine as a street tree. 15°. 
JACARANDA 
Jacaranda mimosaefolia, Jacaranda. Handsome flowering tree with 
attractive light green fern-like foliage making a rounded crown. 
The entire tree bursts into a mass of violet-blue tubular flowers 
in June. Fine street or specimen tree. 20°. 
SUGAR PLUM TREE 
Lagunaria pattersoni. Small narrow tree, often a shrub, with hand- 
some grey-green foliage and neat mallow-like flowers of rose-pink. 
Recommended for sea-coast planting but does well inland too! 20°. 
MAGNOLIA 
Magnolia grandiflora, Southern Mag- 
nolia. Large growing evergreen trees 
always neat in its glossy foliage. The 
immense white fragrant water-lily-like 
flowers appear throughout the sum- 
mer. Give generous amounts of water 
for better blooms. 
MISSION OLIVE 
Olea europea, Manzanillo variety. The 
ornamental value of Olives has been 
recognized a long time but not prac- 
ticed as much as it should. The old 
gnarled, picturesque grey trunks and 
wide spreading masses of greyish green 
foliage are a prize in themselves. Even 
if we don’t grow them for the fruits 
an olive grove with trees 25 feet apart 
in even rows is attractive beyond de- 
scription. Olives almost thrive on neg- 
lect once they are established. Hardy. 
Evergreen Trees are Desirable 
Specimens for Year Around 
Beauty—Many types available. 



MAGNOLIA GRANDIFLORA 
FOR DRY HOT CLIMATES 
Parkinsonia aculeata, Jerusalem Thorn. Small tree, especially use- 
ful in dry hot places, particularly on the desert. The fluffy green 
appearance of the foliage with the green bark is enlivened in early 
summer by beautiful yellow flowers in equally airy panicles. 18°. 
STURDY OAKS 
Quercus agrifolia, California Live Oak. One of the finest trees for 
the home grounds or street planting, the native Oak, with its pic- 
turesque habit and evergreen foliage is easy to grow if given care 
and careful watering. 
CAROLINA CHERRY 
Prunus caroliniana, Carolina Cherry. Dwarf round headed tree or 
large shrub with excellent bronze tipped green foliage and fuzzy 
white flowers followed by black cherries. Wonderful as street trees 
or in the background. 
: PEPPER TREES 
Schinus molle, California Pepper Tree. 
Rapid growing trees with gnarled 
trunks and graceful weeping branch- 
lets of feathery texture have long been 
popular in Southern California. Pretty 
with their red berries in winter. Hardy, 
thriving in poor, light soil. 
Schinus terebinthifolius, Brazilian 
Pepper. Smaller tree with pink berries. 
The leaves are darker green and less 
feathery. Hardy. Very clean habit of 
growth. 
EVERGREEN ELM 
Ulmus sempervirens. Small tree with 
spreading crown of slender drooping 
branches and bright green leaves. Rap- 
idly becoming popular as a street and 
shade tree. Hardy, but not evergreen 
EVERGREEN ELM north. 
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