EVERGREENS FOR YEAR ROUND COLOR 21 
JUNIPERS 
PYRAMIDAL JUNIPER VIRGINIANA—A har- 
dy, pointed pyramidal or column type, with fine 
juniper foliage bright green summer color, bronz- 
ing prettily in winter. A good entrance subject 
for adding height to evergreen groups; used for 
the same purpose as the pyramidal arborvitae; 
very hardy and suited to poor, gravelly soils. 
DWARF SPINY GREEK JUNIPER — A very 
compact little cone-shaped evergreen seldom 
growing over three feet in height; very showy for 
foundation and for edging mixed evergreen 
groups. 
Soprano 
"74 WAUKEGAN 
‘ CREEPING 
: JUNIPER — A 
prostrate form 
growing on the 
ground; a soft 
blue foliage in 
summer, chang- 
ing to bluish pur- 
ple in the fall. A 
fine rockery sub- 
ject, and for covering walls, banks 
and slopes. 
PFITZER’S JUNIPER—A graceful 
spreading type often forming a 
spreading cap; blue green foliage 
and exceptionally hardy. 
SAVIN—Handsome moss green fo- 
liage; adapted to use as a filler in 
Evergreen groups, or as a dwarf 
ground cover. 
VIRGINIANA CANNARTI — A 
newly derived type resembling 
Schotti in leaf and character, mid- 
way in color between the pronounc- 
ed yellowish green of that variety 
and the darkness of Virginiana. 
VIRGINIANA GLAUCA (Blue 
Cedar)—Unlike so many varieties 
it is not at all formal, but without 
losing general compactness, its ir- 
regularity of spread is uniquely at- 
tractive; the broadly conical form 
and beautiful glaucous 
blue foliage making it 
one of the choicest of 
all Junipers. 
SWEDISH (J. Suecica) 
—Tall growing, of for- 
mal, columnar habit. 
One of the hardiest and 
most reliable pillar 
types. The foliage is 
dense, fairly broad, 
with drooping tips; in 
color glaucous green 
somewhat lighter and 
bluer than the Irish 
Juniper. 
Entrance Evergreens 
Pyramidal Juniper Virginiana 
Concolor Fir 
FIR—ABIES 
WHITE FIR (A. Concolor)—A picturesque Colorado spe- 
cies; long leathery leaves, with glaucous tinge when 
young, becoming pale green with age. Branches arrang- 
ed in horizontal whorls. A broad-based, tapering tree 
making a splendid specimen. 
DOUGLAS (Pseudo-tsuga Douglasii)—Very tall growing 
with red-brown bark. Leaves light green above, glaucous 
below. Of thickly conical form, spreading branches, and 
pendulous branchlets. Much used for lawn specimens. 
