312 FAMILIAR TREES AND THEIR LEAVES. 



Haw, Small-fruited. Crataegus spathulata, p. 135. 

 Leaves dark shiny green above, lighter and dull be- 

 neath, leathery in texture, and variable in pattern, very 

 small scarcely ever more than 1^ inches long, and com- 

 monly spoon-shaped, but with the wider part nearer the 

 tip. Found in thickets and on wet ground from Vir- 

 ginia to Florida, Texas, south Arkansas, and southeast 

 Oklahoma. 



Haw, Scarlet. Crataegus mollis, p. 138. Leaves large, 

 from 2 to 5 inches long, broad-ovate, heart-shaped or 

 square at the base, densely fine-hairy beneath, and with 

 narrow acute lobes; flowers with about 20 stamens. 

 Fruit nearly round and scarlet. A common species 

 from south Ontario to eastern South Dakota, east Kan- 

 sas, and Kentucky. 



Haw, Pear or Blackthorn. Crataegus tomentosa, p. 

 139. This species flowers in May and fruits in October. 

 The leaves are obovate to narrow-wedge-shaped at the 

 base, the largest scarcely exceeding 1-| inches in length ; 

 the fruit is nearly round, and is oftenest yellow-green 

 in color. Common in sandy soil from south New York 

 to Florida, and westward to Kentucky, Missouri, and 

 central Texas. 



Ilex Cassine, p. 49. 



Larix decidua, p. 280, replaces the older name Larix 

 Europcea. 



Larix laricina, p. 279. 



Magnolia acuminata, var. cordata, p. 25. 



Magnolia, Great-leaved. Magnolia macrophylla, p. 

 26. The long-ovoid fruit is rose-pink at maturity. Mr. 

 F. A. Chase reports to me that near Grand View, fifty- 

 five miles north of Chattanooga, Tenn., this Magnolia 

 bears leaves 42 inches long and 23 inches wide. 



