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this Austrian pine are two paper birches standing 

 close together. 



Continuing now along the meadow walk, beyond 

 the copallina you meet red maple, cherry, birch, black 

 haw, American hornbeam, California!! privet, black 

 haw again, then a little open stretch, and then choke 

 cherry, with English hawthorn a little back and 

 beyond, and Forsythia very near a spur of the Walk, 

 which bends to the right to climb a few steps to the 

 Drive crossing. Close to the Drive, back of the last 

 mentioned trees and shrubs are several English elms 

 all doing well and all easily recognized by their stal- 

 wart trunks and oak-like thrust of branches. Follow- 

 ing the spur of path here, not across the Drive, but 

 in its semi-circular wandering down a series of steps 

 back to the Walk again, we pass a hackberry right in 

 the fork of its left hand junction and opposite the 

 hackberry, on the right hand bank, Japan quince and 

 European silver linden. 



Now we continue along the meadow path again 

 and the right hand bank has some beautiful lindens 

 both European and American, over which you can 

 well spend many hours of botanizing. As you come 

 near Endale Arch (the Arch beneath which one 

 branch of this Walk passes the Drive and leads 

 out to the right hand exit of the Park at the 

 Plaza) look for the pretty hawthorn with leaves which 

 resemble so much those of the evergreen hawthorn 

 (pyracantha) that they have won for it the name 

 pyracanthafolia. It stands up the bank a little beyond 

 the Judas trees and between a European alder and 



