CRYPTOMERIA JAPONICA LOBBI 
CEDRUS ATLANTICA. Atlas Cedar. A 
tree to 100 feet with upright leading shoots 
and blue-green foliage. Very desirable. 
C. ATLANTICA GLAUCA. The gray Atlas 
Cedar with foliage of a silvery blue. 
C. DEODARA. Tree of the Gods. Tree to 
150 feet with dark bluish green foliage. 
C. LIBANOTICA. Cedar of Lebanon. The 
historical Cedar used in the building of 
Solomon’s Temple. Our strain is a hardy 
one from the Taurus Mountains. 
CEPHALOTAXUS DRUPACEA. Plum 
Yew. A tree to 30 feet. The spirally 
arranged foliage is glaucous beneath. 
C. DRUPACEA FASTIGIATA. An upright 
type of Plum Yew hardy to New York. 
Cc. DRUPACEA PEDUNCULATA. A slow- 
growing type. 
CHAMAECYPARIS LAWSONIANA. Tree 
to 180 feet with reddish brown bark and 
bright green foliage. 
C. LAWSONIANA GLAUCA. A type with 
steel-blue foliage. 
C. OBTUSA. Hinoki Cypress. Pyramidal 
tree with foliage drooping in graceful, 
feathery sprays. 
Cc. OBTUSA GRACILIS. Dwarf Hinoki 
Cypress. A compact, pyramidal form with 
drooping branchlets. 
C. PISIFERA. Sawara Cypress. Pyramidal 
tree with glossy green, flat foliage. 
C. PISIFERA AUREA. A type in which the 
young growth is golden yellow. 
C. PISIFERA FILIFERA. Thread Retinos- 
pora. Bushy type with dark green, thread- 
like, drooping foliage. 
C. PISIFERA PLUMOSA. Plume Retinos- 
pora. One of the hardiest varieties with 
feathery branchlets. 
C. PISIFERA PLUMOSA ARGENTEA. A 
dense evergreen with whitish tips to the 
branchlets. 
C. PISIFERA PLUMOSA AUREA. Pyram- 
idal form having fluffy foliage which is a 
rich golden color in the spring. 
C. PISIFERA SQUARROSA VEITCHI. 
Moss Retinospora. A variety with fleecy 
silver-blue foliage retained all year. 
20 
Evergreens 
Evergreens are as necessary in the planting of the home-grounds as a good 
lawn. The restful green of their lovely foliage brings peace and satisfaction to 
overwrought minds. The large trees not only furnish delightful shade during 
the hot days of summer, but their very appearance is cool and refreshing. One 
learns to love the touch of the soft, silky needles of many varieties and to inhale 
their fragrance, which is always soothing. There are so many desirable things 
among the Conifers that one could have beautiful grounds by using only Ever- 
greens and grass. There are tiny, sprawling plants suitable for the rockery ora 
ground-cover, other slow-growing dwarf ones that will hardly equal a man’s 
height during his lifetime, lovely shrubby types, and some of the most graceful 
of all trees, and the great Sequoia sempervirens, which, if allowed enough cen- 
turies to grow, will eventually rear its head so far in the clouds that we have to 
lean far back to see it. 
There are strange plants among this family, too, for those who like “differ- 
ent” things: Evergreens with golden foliage, some with purplish tints, and, of 
course, the famous Blue Spruce, so highly prized by many. 
Greenbrier Evergreens are well shaped and well grown, sheared and root- 
pruned, and dug with a generous ball of soil. 
JUNIPERUS COMMUNIS HIBERNICA. 
Irish Juniper. Narrow columnar form with 
slender bluish green leaves. 
J. COMMUNIS, KIYONOI. A type of 
English Juniper similar to the Irish in 
habit, but of a darker hue. 
J. COMMUNIS OBLONGO-PENDULA. 
Drooping Juniper. An upright type with 
pendulous branches. 
J. COMMUNIS SUECICA. Swedish Juni- 
per. Columnar tree to 40 feet with gray- 
CRYPTOMERIA JAPONICA LOBBI. An 
informally shaped tree to 125 feet. Cin- 
namon-brown bark which peels off in 
ribbon-like shreds. Brownish drooping 
foliage. Hardy to southern New England. 
CUNNINGHAMIA LANCEOLATA. China 
Fir. Attractive trees with long, stiff, 
pointed leaves on horizontally spreading 
branches, pendulous at the ends. Hardy as 
far north as Washington. 
CUPRESSUS SEMPERVIRENS. Italian 
seb aie ay vane pen seh His oy green foliage. Very formal. 
rk green foliage. Not har 
aoa cu ie erh a hn : Y J. CONFERTA (LITORALIS). Shore Juni- 
per. A procumbent shrub with bluish 
green foliage with a white band above. 
J. EXCELSA STRICTA. Spiny Greek 
Juniper. A tall, dense, narrow plant taper- 
ing from the ground to a sharp terminal 
point. Grayish foliage. Slow growth. 
Junipers 
The Junipers are a large family with plants 
of so many types that one can have a mag- 
nificent specimen or a slow-growing, dainty 
thing suitable for the rock-garden. Tr. HORIZONTALIS (PROSTRATA). Creep- 
ing Juniper. Procumbent shrub with long 
trailing branches and bluish green foliage. 
They will do fairly well in almost any kind 
of soil, but prefer one rather sandy and loamy 
with moderate moisture. They are very hardy. 
JUNIPERUS CHINENSIS ALBO-VARIE- 
GATA. White-leaf Chinese Juniper. Com- 
pact shrub with the tips of the branches 
creamy white. 
J. CHINENSIS COLUMNARIS. A colum- 
nar more slender type than the above. 
J. CHINENSIS DENSA GLAUCA. Dense, 
conical, blue-green Juniper. 
J. CHINENSIS MAS. Chinese Column 
Juniper. A dense, conical form. 
J. CHINENSIS PFITZERIANA. Pfitzer’s 
Juniper. Broad, spreading type with 
horizontal branches and nodding branchlets. 
J. CHINENSIS PYRAMIDALIS. A narrow, 
pyramidal type with bluish green foliage. 
J. CHINENSIS SARGENTI. A prostrate 
shrub, less than 1 foot tall, with bluish green 
foliage, making mats 10 feet in diameter. 
J. CHINENSIS SYLVESTRIS. Broad py- 
ramidal Juniper of golden green color. 
J. COMMUNIS. Common Juniper. Stately 
tree to 40 feet with gray-green foliage. 
J. COMMUNIS DEPRESSA. Prostrate 
Juniper. Native plant spreading to a dozen 
feet or more but rarely exceeding 4 feet in 
height. Foliage silvery gray-green. 
J. COMMUNIS DEPRESSA AUREO- 
SPICA. Golden Prostrate Juniper. Va- 
riety with golden yellow tips. 
ii 
JUNIPERUS CHINENSIS SYLVESTRIS _ 
GREENBRIER FARMS, INC. 
