AMERICAN HOME GARDEN. 4R9 



and some of them are also, on various accounts, well suited to 

 the lawn. Among others, that bearing the rather small, pretty 

 sweet apple, called by Duhamel the " Pigeonnette" which is a 

 beautifully-formed tree, with clean, expanding arms and free 

 habit, and, though the fruit may be kept into winter, yet it be- 

 gins to ripen early, and is admirably adapted to the use of 

 children, as it falls gradually from the tree. 



Along om- country roads, too, fruit-trees might to some ex- 

 tent be properly planted, not only for ornament, but use, to be 

 reckoned, like our wild fruits, as common property. 



Besides those named above, our woods fm-nish a great variety 

 of fine ornamental trees, which are easily obtained. The Chest- 

 nut, Castanea Americana ; the various Oaks, particularly the 

 White Oak, Quercus alba, and the Rock Oak, Quercus monta- 

 na, both yielding also solid and useful timber ; the American 

 Linden or Basswood, Tilia glabra ; the Wild Cherry, Primus 

 Virgirdana ; the Hop Hornbeam or Iron wood, Ostrya Vir- 

 ginica ; the Shad Flower, Arotiia hotryapium, and many oth- 

 ers, which the following list docs not include. 



1. Ash, Weeping, Fraxhms pendula. A curious and pret- 

 ty ash, readily increased by side grafting upon the common 

 kinds. 



2. Beech, Copper-colored or Purple, Fagus purpurea ; Red, 

 Fagiis ferrucjinea ; Common, Fagus sylvatica. The two lat- 

 ter are common in our woods, and are clean and beautiful for- 

 est trees. The first, which is curious, may be grafted upon 

 them by tongue or side grafting. 



3. Birch, White, Betula alha ; Red, Betula rubra ; Yq[- 

 \(yw, Betiila excelsa; V-a]iq.v, Betula papiyracea. All common, 

 abomiding, and beautiful. 



4. Catalpa, or Cigar-tree, Coialpa syringcefolia. A fine 

 fiowering tree, easily raised from seeds sown in the spring. 



5. Cherries, Large Double-flowering, Cerasus sylvestris 

 plena ; Weeping, Cerasus vulgaris semperjiorens. May be 

 grafted on any common kind. 



6. Chinese Kolreuteria, Kolreuteria paniculata. A 

 pretty tree, with a profusion of yellow blossoms in the latter 

 part of summer. Increased by layers. 



X 2 



