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with yellow. Another interesting garden plant, P. Falconerii, which is 
certainly Asiatic and probably Japanese, has narrow lanceolate leaves 
and fragrant flowers in from one- to six-flowered racemes, and is dis- 
tinct in the shape of its leaves and in its long narrow petals. The 
origin and history of this plant is not known. 
Hybrid Philadelphus. The first hybrid Philadelphus which attracted 
attention was raised in France before 1870 by a Monsieur Billard, and 
is sometimes called in gardens Souvenir de Billard, although the correct 
name for it is Philadelphus insignis. This hybrid is one of the hand- 
somest of all the tall-growing Syringas, and its value is increased by 
the fact that it is one of the latest of them all to flower. In a few 
old gardens in the neighborhood of Boston great Syringa bushes occa- 
sionally thirty feet high and correspondingly broad are sometimes 
found. These plants are believed to be hybrids between P. coronarius 
and some unrecognized species. It is called Philadelphus maximus. 
Another hybrid, P. magnificus, sprang up in the Arboretum several 
years ago and is supposed to be a hybrid between two American species, 
P. inodorus and P. pubescens. It is a large and shapely shrub with 
pure white only slightly fragrant flowers an inch and three-quarters 
in diameter and borne in erect clusters. Philadelphus splendens flow- 
ers very freely and when the flowers are open it is the showiest plant 
in the Syringa Group. 
Lemoine Hybrid Philadelphus. Several years ago the French plant 
breeder Lemoine crossed P. coronarius with the Rocky mountain P. 
microphyllus and obtained an entirely new race to which the general 
name of P. Lemoinei was given. The original bush is intermediate 
between the parents in size and in the size of the flowers. The flowers 
are pure white, very fragrant and produced in profusion. From this 
plant Lemoine raised many seedlings and secondary hybrids and these 
vary from the original P. Lemoinei in size and in the size and shape 
of the flowers. Taken as a whole the Lemoine hybrid Syringas form 
one of the most beautiful groups of garden plants that has been created 
by man. There are a number of these plants in the Arboretum col- 
lection and they have been considered perfectly hardy here, but last 
winter was too cold for some of them. P. Lemoinei itself and many 
of its varieties are uninjured, but a few of the second hybrids were 
killed to the ground but are now growing again from the roots. Un- 
fortunately among the injured is the little plant called Conquete which 
is usually considered the handsomest of these Lemoine Syringas. This 
is the midseason for Philadelphus. The flowers of the Korean P. 
Schneckii var. Jackii, which are always the first to open, faded nearly 
two weeks ago, and the buds on some of the other species and hybrids 
will not open for nearly a month. 
The Sour Gum or Tupelo (Nyssa sylvatica) is now in flower. The 
minute yellow-green flowers of this tree are hidden by the leaves and 
will only be seen by persons who are specially looking for them. In 
spite of its inconspicuous flowers the Sour Gum is one of the handsome 
trees of eastern North America where it grows from Maine to Florida 
and Texas. The greatest beauty of this tree is in its lustrous, dark 
