DECIDUOUS SBBUBS. 471 



almost exclusively with the pendant racemes of this variety mingled 

 with green leaves. The form of the shrub, when young, is rather 

 stiffly upright, but in time it spreads into a graceful little bush, from 

 three to four feet in height and breadtli. 



THE ALTHEA. Hibiscus syriacus. 



Fig. i6i shows the common form of the althea, Fig. i6i. 

 •which is usually quite fastigiate, broadest at the top, 

 and oftfsn bare of leaves below ; but it oftenest forms 

 a head on a bundle of stems growing from the trunk 

 near the ground, rather than with so tree-like a trunk 

 as the illustration shows. It is one of the longest 

 known and commonest of garden shrubs, and forms 

 a good centre for a group of lower shrubs, and is 

 useful in belts of shrubbery where its high top and showy blossoms 

 may be seen over the tops of more graceful and lower shrubs in 

 front. Blooming in August and September when most shrubs are 

 done flowering, and with flowers of large size and many colors, it 

 will always be found quite useful and showy in pleasure-grounds, 

 though the flowers are of coarse texture, and not fragrant. They 

 are from three to four inches in diameter, both single and double. 

 Purple is the prevailing color, but nearly all the bright colors are 

 represented by the finest varieties. The leaves appear later than 

 those of most shrubs, but are of a pleasing green color. The althea 

 has been considerably used for hedges, but its lateness in spring 

 renders it less desirable than the privet and many other deciduous 

 shrubs j and its inferiority to some of the evergreens for this pur- 

 pose is manifest. The following are some of the best varieties : 



The Single and the Double White, Double Red, Double Blue, 

 Pheasant-eyed, White-striped, the ekgantissima, and the Variegated- 

 leaved. The latter is one of the finest of variegated-leaved shrubs. 

 Some of the most showy varieties of the althea are not quite hardy 

 in the coldest parts of our country, and to insure their greatest 

 beauty in summer must be planted in sheltered situations, or pro- 

 tected by mulching and bundling. 



