. Native and exotic plants, trees & shrubs. Nursery stock Florida Catalogs; Nurseries (Horticulture) Florida Catalogs; Tropical plants Catalogs; Palms Catalogs; Fruit trees Seedlings Catalogs; Plants, Ornamental Catalogs. Conifers 27 CUPRESSUS. continued. C. Lawsoniana. A large, graceful tree from California, having drooping brandies and silvery green foliage. Needs a dry soil. Small plants, 20 cts. each, $2 per doz. C> sempervirens. Cypress of western Asia and southern Europe. A common tree in Mohammedan cemeteries, especially about Constantinople. Famous for its great age and the dura
. Native and exotic plants, trees & shrubs. Nursery stock Florida Catalogs; Nurseries (Horticulture) Florida Catalogs; Tropical plants Catalogs; Palms Catalogs; Fruit trees Seedlings Catalogs; Plants, Ornamental Catalogs. Conifers 27 CUPRESSUS. continued. C. Lawsoniana. A large, graceful tree from California, having drooping brandies and silvery green foliage. Needs a dry soil. Small plants, 20 cts. each, $2 per doz. C> sempervirens. Cypress of western Asia and southern Europe. A common tree in Mohammedan cemeteries, especially about Constantinople. Famous for its great age and the durability of its timber. The tree is a slender, upright-growing one, with the habit of the Lombardy poplar. 80 feet. Very dis- tinct and elegant. Small trees, in open ground, 15 cts, each, $ per doz.; larger, 25 cts. each, $ per doz. Specimens from 4 to 8 feet, 50 cts., 75 cts. and $1 each. These are easily transplanted. C. sempervirens pyramldalis. Pyra- midal in form; this is very different from the type. The tree is a choice one, and does well in the South. It would be ex- cellent for hedge building or windbreaks. Sizes and prices same as preceding species. C. torulosa. The Twisted, or Botan Cypress. An Indian species, of large size and quick growth. Splendid for tall hedges or windbreaks, being very dense and hardy. It makes a fine ornamental specimen in a few years on ordinary soil. Small, pot-grown plants, 10 cts. each, $1 per doz. LIBOCEDRUS decurrens. White Cedar of California, reaching an ultimate height of 200 feet and a stem circumfer- ence of 25 feet. Admirably adapted for tall hedges and windbreaks on soils not too wet, and grows freely in the South. It needs good soil, and does not succeed in too thirsty, poor sand. Large, in pots, 40 cts. each. PINUS. The true Pine. "The name Pinus is by some writers derived from the Greek word pion (fat), in allusion to its resin or tar; the Sanskrit. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images
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