20 EVERGREENS FOR YEAR ROUND COLOR 
ARBORVITAE 
PYRAMIDAL ARBORVITAE—Compact and erect growing with soft | 
bright green foliage in flat leaf-clusters much used in landscape work be- 
cause of its pyramidal form and good foliage color. 
GLOBE ARBORVITAE—A compact, round ball as it develops, with flat, 
close-growing sprays of bright green; used for entrance and foundation 
planting; like other forms it is suitable for shade as well as sun exposure. 
PEABODY’S GOLDEN ARBORVITAE—The best of the golden foliage 
types, with good color and slender habit; useful for color accent in mixed 
planting. 
——. AMERICAN ARBORVITAE 
| (T. Occidentalis)—A beauti- 
ful native bright green; yel- 
low green beneath; valuable 
for screens and hedges. 
SIBERIAN ARBORVITAE 
(T. Occidentalis Siberica)— 
One of the best of the genus 
of this country; exceedingly 
hardy, keeping color well; 
growth compact and pyra- 
midal; makes an _ excellent | 
Tae AA 
lawn tree. 
BS Se ee ay American Arborvitae 
compact, dense, slow-grow- 
ing dwarf type valuable for foregrounds and edging. 
The flattened leaf-clusters face outwards edgewise, pre- 
senting a beautiful surface of vertical fluted lines. The 
color is that fresh, bright, yellow tone of green found in 
Hovey’s Golden, but much brighter, and is always con- 
spicuous. 
PINE 
DWARF MUGHO PINE—Very popular for entrance 
and foundation treatment. Rich, dark green color, and 
round, symmetrical ball-like shape. Very hardy and ad- 
mirable to poor dry soil. 
AUSTRIAN PINE—Darkest and richest green of the pines; 
quite dense and evenly branched, attaining considerable 
height and spread in time; makes a fine windbreak. 
BULL PINE (P. Ponderosa)—A lofty tree from our wes- 
tern coasts, growing sometimes to 150 feet. Hardy, quick 
growing with long Shee ale ai fs 
needles of silvery 
green. 
7 a ee SCOTCH PINE (P. 
oe : A a Sylvestris) — 
(ae ik ; Dense, broadly py- 
7 Paes . ramidal, fifty to 
. : eighty feet high; 
< a oo Hau rian tain 
2 a growth, with 
oe mL strong, erect 
Mugho Pine shoots and silvery 
needles. 
YELLOW PINE (P. Echinata)—A tall, handsome tree with 
slender often perpendiculous branches, forming a broad oval 
crown; leaves in twos and threes, dark green, three to four 
inches long, dull brown. Splendid for lawn and landscape. 
RETINOSPORA (Japan Cypress) 
FILIFERA (Thread-branched Japan Cypress)—Slender, string 
like bright green foliage, drooping in long filaments. Grace- 
ful. 
PISIFERA—Cone-shaped foliage fine cut and rather droop- 
ing at tips. One of the best. 
PISIFERA AUREA—This has the same habit of growth as 
above, but all new growth is yellow or real light green. Looks 
x 
something like an Arborvitae. Austrian Pine 
