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SILVA OF NORTH AMERICA. 
ROSACEZ. 
Crategus Jonese inhabits the rocky shores of ocean sounds and bays in southeastern Maine, where 
it is distributed from Belfast Bay to the island of Bar Harbor.’ This handsome and distinct species has 
been named for Miss Beatrix Jones,’ landscape-gardener. 
1 In my original description of Crategus Jonese it was said to 
grow at Orono on the Penobscot River, a fruiting specimen of an- 
other species having been mistaken for it. I now know Crategus 
Jonese only in the neighborhood of the ocean. 
2 Beatrix Jones (June 19, 1872), the daughter of Frederick 
Rhinelander Jones and Mary Cadwallader Rawle, was born in 
New York. On her father’s side she is descended from the Rhine- 
lander and Stevens families of New York, who for several genera- 
On her mother’s side 
she is descended from the Rawle and Cadwallader families of 
tions have been interested in horticulture. 
Pennsylvania. Endowed with unusual natural gifts, cultivated by 
a liberal education, and carefully trained in the United States and 
Europe to a technical knowledge of the art of landscape-gardening, 
Miss Jones is the first American woman who has successfully prac- 
ticed that art as a profession. 
EXPLANATION OF THE PLATE. 
Prate DCLXXXIV. Cratacus JonEse. 
oCAOaAN Ao fF WD 
. A flowering branch, natural size. 
. Vertical section of a flower, natural size. 
. A fruiting branch, natural size. 
. Vertical section of a fruit, natural size. 
. Cross section of a fruit showing the nutlets, natural size. 
- A calyx removed from a ripe fruit, natural size. 
. A nutlet, side view, enlarged. 
. A nutlet, rear view, enlarged. 
. End of a winter branchlet, natural size. 
