Harrisons' nurseries : "nurserymen - orchardists" . in twenty or thirty yearsit seldom attains a height of more than .30 feet. In summerthe foliage is bright green above and yellowish beneath : inwinter the foliage changes to bronzy hues. Each 10 100 3 to 4 feet H 00 $17 50 $ 00 4 to o feet 3 00 27 .50 00 5 to 6 feet 4 00 37 50 S50 00 6 to 7 feet 5 00 47 50 7 to 8 feet 6 00 50 00 8 to 10 feet 8 00 75 00 ELLWANGERS SIBERIAN (T. occidentalis Ellwangeriana). Each 10 2 to 3 feet . §1 50 $12 50 8 to 4 feet 2 00 17 50 4 to 5 feet 3 00 27 50 CHINESE (Biota orientalis). The outline of the tre


Harrisons' nurseries : "nurserymen - orchardists" . in twenty or thirty yearsit seldom attains a height of more than .30 feet. In summerthe foliage is bright green above and yellowish beneath : inwinter the foliage changes to bronzy hues. Each 10 100 3 to 4 feet H 00 $17 50 $ 00 4 to o feet 3 00 27 .50 00 5 to 6 feet 4 00 37 50 S50 00 6 to 7 feet 5 00 47 50 7 to 8 feet 6 00 50 00 8 to 10 feet 8 00 75 00 ELLWANGERS SIBERIAN (T. occidentalis Ellwangeriana). Each 10 2 to 3 feet . §1 50 $12 50 8 to 4 feet 2 00 17 50 4 to 5 feet 3 00 27 50 CHINESE (Biota orientalis). The outline of the tree is similar toour native arborvitae, but the foliage is more delicately cut andin some cases a deeper green. Each 10 f to 3 feet—100, -SlOO $1 50 $12 50 3 to 4 feet 2 00 17 50 4 to 5 feet 3 00 27 50 5 to 6 feet 4 00 37 50 6 to 7 feet 5 00 45 00 7 to 8 feet 6 00 55 00 We accept Liberty Loan Bonds, Thrift Stamps and War Savings Stamps,ai face value, but no cash discount is allowed for such payments. 58 HARRISONS NURSERIES, BERLIN, MD., U. S. Fernlike Arborvitae. ARBORVITAE, contiuued Each GLOBULAR (T. globosa). 18 to 24 inches $1 50 2 to 3 feet 2 00 HOVEYS GLOBULAR. 3 to 4 feet 3 00 FERNLIKE (T. occidentalis). 3 to 4 feet 3 00 4 to 5 feet 4 00 5 to 6 feet 5 00 6 to 7 feet 6 00 PYRAMIDAL (T. pyramidalis). 3*o 4 feet 2 00 4 to r> feet 8 00 5 to 6 feet 4 00 - COMPACT (T. compacta). 18 to 24 inches 1 50 10 $12 50 17 50 25 00 25 00 37 50 45 00 50 00 17 50 27 50 37 50 12 50 The Cedars Blue Virffinia i Juniper us vlrgimana glauca). A variation of ^ the Virginia cedar, but preferable to the par-ent type. The foliage has the same pungent, fragrant odoras the old cedar,but the color is adark bluish green,and is brought outto the best advan-tage when shownagainst the back-ground of darkgreen trees orshrubs. The BlueVirginia makes asplendid specimentree for lawnplantings, forscreens betweenthe house andservice yard, orfor low w i n d-breaks. It maynot be an over-statement to sayth


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhenryggi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookyear1921