2 PETRIE NURSERY 
ABIES CONCOLOR—White or silver fir may reach 120 ft. 
in time. It is a gray barked graceful evergreen with 
silvery foliage that can stand heat and drought better 
than any other fir. 18-24 in. $5.00; 2-3 ft. $6.00 
CHAMAECYPARIS — FALSE CYPRESS 
CHAMAECYPARIS LAWSONIANA ELWOODI — Elwood Cy- 
press, dense, compact, with silver blue foliage of light 
delicate texture. Dwarf. Does better on east or north. 
24-30 in. $5.00 
CHAMAECYPARIS LAWSONIANA FLETCHERI — Fletcher 
Cypress has feathery blue-gray foliage, turning even 
grayer in winter. Handsome against darger greens. 
Spreading pyramid. East or North 24-30 in. $5.00 
CUPRESSUS ARIZONICA—Arizona Cypress is one of the 
distinctive evergreens of western north America. It is 
of bluish green foliage giving rise to a good looking good 
sized tree that is well filled out. 
18-24 in. $3.50; 24-30 in. $6.00 
CUPRESSUS ARIZONICA PYRAMIDALIS — A new very 
symmetrical, compact form of Arizona Cypress of an in- 
tense silvery-blue color. Makes excellent dense pyramidal 
specimens without shearing. Gal. $2.00 
CUPRESSUS MACNABIANA—MacNab cypress is the har- 
diest of the tribe, native of southern Oregon and Cali- 
fornia makes a bushy tree to 35 ft often shrubby with 
several stems. 
18-24 in. $3.50; 24-30 in. $6.00; 30-36 in. $7.00; 
3-4 ft. $8.00; 4-5 ft. $10.00; 5-6 ft. $15.00 
CUPRESSUS SEMPERVIRENS WORTHIANA —This is a 
hardy strain of Italian cypress originating at Fort Worth, 
Texas. It is grown from grafts from a form that went 
thru a winter in which all the other trees were injured 
or destroyed. Still experimental here but itlooks hopeful. 
24-30 in. $3.50; 30-36 in. $4.50 
JUNIPERUS — THE JUNIPERS 
The junipers, savins and red cedars make up a group of 
evergreens of the greatest hardiness and adaptability. They 
are largely used in landscape developments because species 
and varieties can be obtained that will fill almost any re- 
quirements of soil or site. Some of them make small trees, 
others areshrub-like, while still others are prostrate forms 
covering a considerable area. All are among the most 
feathery and graceful of the evergreens. They need for the 
most part free exposure to the sun and air. For south 
Idaho conditions they are tops. 
JUNIPERUS CHINENSIS—Chinese juniper may, on occasion 
reach a height of sixty feet. It is a very variable species 
that has given rise to many garden forms. The needles 
are sharp pointed, gray green in color, changing to bronzy 
ated in winter. The berries are globular and brownish 
violet. 
2-3 ft. $6.00; 3-4 ft. $8.00; 4-5 ft. $10.00; 6-7 ft. $15.00 
JUNIPERUS CHINENSIS ALBO-VARIEGATA —This is a 
dwarfer and more compact form. Some of the branchlets 
are tipped with white giving just a slight but striking 
color break in a planting. 24-30 in $6.00; 30-36 in. $7.50 
