November, 1017 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



123 



This view across the Jumper collection illustrates the method 

 of grouping allied plants for easy comparison 



Vie^s in the 

 Arnold Arboretum 



Looking across the Beech collection toward the Hemlock Hill 

 clothed with a native grove and fronted with Laurel 



Seeds of a hardy form of Cedar of Lebanon were collected 

 for the Arboretum on the Anti-Taurus Mountains in Asia 

 Minor in 1901. The plants have never suffered from the cold 



In the collection of Crabapple, Malus theifera is conspic- 

 uous for its open branching habit 



Acanthopanax (Kalopanax ricinifolium) from seed col- 

 lected in Japan in 1892. Tree is now thirty-five feet tall. 

 Has clusters of white flowers in July 



The main roadway through the Arboretum is a succession of remarkable groups and individual plants. The Forest Hill Road; Cherry collection on the left with the largest plant of the 



Sargent Cherry in the United States in foreground; Crabapple collection on the right 



