44 



HAND-BOOK OF PRACTICAL 



1— Cembrian Pine. 



2 — Magnolia Glanca. 



3 — American White Spruce. 



4 — Austrian Pine. 



5 — Dwarf Horse Chestnut. 



6 — Magnolia Purpurea. 



7 — Strawberry Tree. 



8 — Purple Fringe. 



9— Japan Quince. 



10— This is designed for a bud of flowers of 

 sorts. Lilacs, Geraniums, Tea Roses, Bourbon 

 Roses, Lantanas, Verbenas, etc., such as may 

 please the taste of the owner and yc-t be in 

 bloom most of the season. A good effect is to 

 raise the rear of the bed next the house to the 

 upper tier of the underpinning, then make it 

 a rolling grade down to the turf. Then place 

 here and there a broken stone of varied color, 

 tilling in and around them with good soil from 

 the woods, and then plant the American Ivy or 

 Virginia Creeper, varieties of Hardy Clematis 



and Trailing Junipers for the purpose of 

 keeping a green show in winter. 

 11 — Tom Thumb, or some other dwarf sort i f 



Arbor Yitie. 

 12, 12— Two varieties of Apples, grown as 



dwarfs. 

 13— Red Jacket Cherry. 

 14 — Eockport Cherry. 

 15 — Early Richmond Cherry. 

 16— Black Tartarian Cherry. 

 17— Early York Peach. 

 18— Old Mixon Free Peach. 

 10-Crawford"s Early Peach. 

 20 to 85 — Varieties of Dwarf Pears as follows: 

 1 Benrre Giffart. 1 Bartlett. 



1 Duchess d'Angowlem.-*. 1 Tyson. 



1 Benrre d'Anjou. 

 26, 27 and 88— Grapes : 

 1 Concord. 1 Delaware. 



1 Hartford Prolific. 

 '."i. 89— Quinces. 

 <i0,30 — Rows for Currants or other small fruits 





