50 THE |. W. SCOTT CO., Pittsburgh, Pa. 
500 Liberty Ave. - 113 Diamond St. 
EVERGREENS 
Evergreens are among the most popular and widely used of 
They are symbols of permanence, and 
throughout the entire year they bring a quiet dignity and charm 
all plant materials. 
to the home. Evergreens are used for foundation or entrance 
Taxus cuspidata capitata 
(Upright Japanese Yew) 
EVERGREEN 
TREES 
CHAMAECYPARIS pisifera plumosa. 
Plume Cypress. Light green, soft and 
feathery foliage. Makes a compact 
plant if sheared, and can then be 
used in foundation plantings or as a 
specimen. 
JUNIPERUS chinensis Pfitzeriana. 
Pfitzer Juniper. Very hardy; will en- 
dure dusty, smoky growing con- 
ditions. Spreading habit of growth; 
gray-green foliage. Well adapted to 
planting about foundations, entrances 
and steps. 
glauca Hetzi. Hetz’s Spreading Juni- 
per. Resembles Pfitzer Juniper but 
has bluish foliage. Fine for founda- 
tion plantings. 
horizontalis plumosa. Andorra Juni- 
per. Grayish green in summer and 
pinkish in fall and winter. Low and 
spreading; about 15 to 18 inches tall. 
Good on banks and hillsides. 
virginiana glauca. Silvery Red Cedar. 
Silvery gray the year round, brightest 
in spring. Grows quite rapidly and 
does well in the South as well as in 
the North. May be trimmed to a 
formal outline if desired. 
PICEA excelsa. Norway Spruce. Very 
rapid grower. Heavy masses of dark 
green foliage. Entirely hardy and 
robust, thriving on damp as well as 
high ground. 
pungens. Colorado Spruce. A very 
hardy, tall-growing evergreen with 
medium green needles. A symmetri- 
cal, handsome tree. 
TAXUS cuspidata. Spreading Japanese 
Yew. A compact, spreading evergreen 
with rich, dark green foliage and 
bright scarlet berries in fall. Hardy 
and valuable. 
cuspidata capitata. Upright Japanese 
Yew. Somewhat open in growth; 
light green tips on the foliage in the 
spring. Upright or pyramidal growth. 
media (intermedia). A _ spreading 
grower with dark green foliage. 
media Browni. Brown’s Yew. Erect, 
conical tree to 8 feet tall. Dense 
foliage. 
media Hicksi. Hicks Yew. A narrow, 
upright form for formal accent or 
hedge planting. 
THUJA occidentalis. American Ar- 
borvitae. Upright growth; flat foliage. 
Used as a specimen tree and for 
hedges and windbreaks. Will stand 
severe shearing. 
occidentalis elegantissima. Pyram- 
idal tree with bright yellow foliage. 
occidentalis globosa. Globe Arbor- 
vitae. Low, dense, globe-shaped va- 
riety. Useful for border planting. 
A slow grower. Very hardy. 
occidentalis pyramidalis. Pyramidal 
Arborvitae. Columnar, glossy, dark 
green foliage, attractive summer and 
winter. Fine accent tree. 
occidentalis sibirica. Siberian Ar- 
borvitae. Forms a broad pyramid. 
Deep olive-green foliage. Slow grow- 
ing. 
TSUGA canadensis. American Hem- 
lock. Very graceful native tree to be 
planted as a specimen or hedge. 
Slender, drooping branches. Stands 
considerable shade. 
Evergreens and Perennial Plants 
will be available at our Garden Center 
only. A complete selection of annuals 
and vegetable plants will be sold at 
both our Downtown Store and the 
Garden Center. 
plantings, for hedges and specimens. It pays to use care in choos- 
ing the right kind for the situation you have in mind. All our 
evergreens are balled and burlapped. 
EVERGREEN 
SHRUBS AND 
VINES 
AZALEAS, Evergreen. Among _ the 
showiest and most satisfactory of all 
flowering shrubs. Makes a mass of 
color in spring. 
Hinodegiri. Crimson. Dwarf and slow 
growing. 
Kaempferi. Torch Azalea. Orange- 
red to salmon-pink. Needs partial 
shade. Tall; very free flowering. 
DAPHNE Cneorum. Rose Daphne. A 
dwarf evergreen shrub blooming pro- 
fusely in April and May. Fragrant, 
rosy pink flowers. 
EUONYMUS radicans vegetus. Large, 
round leaves; orange-scarlet berries 
in fall. 
HEDERA helix. English Ivy. Rich 
dark green climber for a sheltered 
wall. 
helix gracilis. Very graceful vine. 
Foliage much smaller than that of 
English Ivy. 
ILEX crenata convexa. Japanese Box- 
leaf Holly. Dense, compact-growing 
plant with deep green foliage. For 
foundation plantings. 
crenata rotundifolia. 
glossy leaves. 
latifolia. A large tree; glossy dark 
leaves with lighter reverse. Dense red 
berries. 
KALMIA latifolia. Mountain Laurel. 
Rich, glossy green leaves; large, 
showy clusters of pinkish white flow- 
Round, very 
ers in early summer. Hardy and 
vigorous. 
LEUCOTHOE Catesbzi. Drooping 
Leucothoe. Valuable for shady spots. 
Fragrant white blooms in long, droop- 
ing racemes. Foliage is purplish all 
winter. 
MAHONIA aquifolium. Oregon Holly- 
grape. Dark, lustrous evergreen 
leaves and yellow flowers in May. 
Blue-black berries and reddish bronze 
foliage in winter. 
PACH YSANDRA terminalis. Japanese 
Spurge. A splendid evergreen ground- 
cover for shady places where grass 
will not grow. 
RHODODENDRONS. Magnificent large 
shrubs blooming in early summer. 
Handsome the year round. 
