E uerg/ieent 
Evergreens are often called the aristocrats American 
of the foundation planting. They carry the Upright 
foliage through the winter and add that “bit se 
of green” when other plants are dormant. 
2 Inexpensive 
Evergreens 
ARBOR-VITAE 
AMERICAN. 30 feet. (Thuia 
occidentalis). Popular with 
home owners everywhere. Well 
known columnar tree. Our trees 
are sheared in the nursery row * 
each summer. 
I2hine toelS: itl. aoe $1.75 
USmitietoe2l4. ite eee 275) ° 
The Compact 
BLACK HILLS SPRUCE GLOBE. 5 feet. (T. occidentalis 
Green With Blue Tint globosa). Dwarf plant. Com- 
BLACK HILLS (P. glauca densata). pact, natural globular form. Use 
60 ft. Compact, slow grower. Its foli- in foundation planting, or where 
age varies from green to bluish tint. accent plant of this type is de- 
Each sired. 
LP tinetOR Stil. bes coke sea $1.75 Each Globe Arbor-Vitae 
1Stinetoe2 Asin es waco o's * oy 2.50 127i. to715 in. eee $3.00 
Our evergreens are shipped YEWS = Taxus 
: 3 xus 
with a peat moss ball thus insur- Taxus 
: : Cuspidata 
ing arrival to you field-fresh— : 
! Capitata 
sure to grow! 
The BEST of the Evergreens 
Taxus Media Hicksi 
CUSPIDATA. (Spreading Yew). Rarely over 8 ft. spread and 
5 ft. height if left unsheared. Deep green, dense spreading 
foliage. Red fruit in fall. Good plant for foundation use, and 
will stand reasonable amount of shade. Excellent hedge plant. 
12 in. to 15 in. spread 
15 in. to 18 in. spread 
CUSPIDATA CAPITATA. (Upright 
Yew). 12 feet. Good hedge Yew, or as 
semi-formal specimen. Typical deep 
green Yew foliage, and broadly pyram- 
idal shape. 
Iemeto7l5 in. 
MEDIA HICKSI. (Hicks’ Yew). 10 ft. 
Compact, columnar shape. Useful in 
foundation planting, and as a formal 
specimen. 
Each 
PAST eee list rire eee ae $5.00 eat : 
uspidata 
(Gt hn CR | eae 6.00 : 
[15] 
