September 15, 1897.] 



Garden and Forest. 



363 



(4) A plant similar to No. 2, from which it differs tainous regions of Japan, and where it becomes a tree 

 only in its time of flowering, which is during- the first twenty-five or thirty feet in height, with a short well- 

 halt ot July, or about six weeks earlier. A flowering formed trunk a few inches in diameter and stout pendulous 

 branch ot this form appears in the illustration below. branches. 



F 'g- 47-— Hydrangea paniculala See page 36? 



IjL J P \ ra T ! u th l A J n ° ld A / boretum fr ° m Whether two species can be distinguished in this croup 



seeds gathered in 1892 by Professor Sargent in the or whether we have only an early and a late flowing raw 



t T ^v I" eZ °' w t here Hytor.g-ea Paniculata fc of one species, we have" not yet sufficient information on 



exceedingly common, as it is further south in all moun- which to base an opinion. 



