Mariposa Helen Durnhaugh California Enchantress 
Gladys Sherwood Mrs. Warnaar Attraction 
Tom Lundy George Walters 
PEONY FLOWERED. 
Cleopatra Jessie Scale Edith Cavell 
Geisha Elsa Madonna 
Gorgeous Leo XIII. California 
Peg o' my Heart Edith Wooster 
Blue Bird Pacific Glow 
For cut flower or garden use the following varieties are good. 
DECOEATIVE. 
Pat O'Mara Great Britain Mina Burgle 
King of the Autumn Azalea . Delice 
Bed Flamingo Venus 
CACTUS AND HYBRID CACTUS. 
Countess of Lonsdale Magnificent Perle de Lyon 
E. T. Hawes F. W. Fellows Melody 
M. Bouchon - Yellow King • Bed Cross 
Golden West W. E. Estes 
Manus Cueran. 
Scwickley, Pa. 
Transplanting Cedars 
Several years ago, while in the midst of transplanting many 
wild Cedars at Aratoma Farm, I wrote a paper on this subject 
for our Bedford Garden Club. It has been re-written now, a 
little more brief perhaps, but with added years of deeper exper- 
ience. Having parted with Aratoma Farm and its wonderful 
Cedars, life has granted me the rare privilege of living again 
here at Aratoma Ledge, the upper end of my grandfather's 
estate, where as a child my sisters and I used to play under the 
long shadows of these stately Junipers which, even so long ago, 
rose like organ pipes on the steep hillside along the old Hook 
Road. 
We all know that most of our Cedars which grow wild here 
are not the Cedrus Coniferae, or true Cedars, but trees of other 
genera, such as Chamaecyparis, Juniperus Cupressis, Thuya, 
Cedrela, etc., these are constantly called Cedars. As far as 1 
know, most of our trees at Aratoma Ledge are Juniperus, or 
Junipers. This family- is very large, having thirty-five species, 
and each species endless varieties, most of them very hard to 
determine except by an expert, unless they bear berries. Most 
of the species are very variable both in habit and in the shape 
of their leaves, which is the main reason why the determination 
of an unknown form is so difficult. The pyramidalis, according 
to Bailey, grows to a hundred feet, and is a very valuable species. 
The bulk of ours are virginiana, or Red Cedar, and among the 
varieties we have the glauca, the pyramidalis, which is a fair 
substitute for the classical Cypress, and many others which I 
have not studied enough to state accurately. Curiously enough, 
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