55 
marked by large pale dots and nearly an inch long, and rather longer 
than broad. The fruit ripens about the middle of October as the leaves 
turn color and does not entirely fall before December. Another mem- 
ber of the same group as the last C. durobrivensis (Dilatatae), the 
Rochester Thorn, is valuable for the winter garden because the dark 
crimson fruit, which is nearly three-quarters of an inch in diameter, 
remains on the branches uninjured by frost until midwinter. It is a 
large shrub with flowers an inch in diameter in many-flowered clusters. 
Crataegus pruinosa. This is the type of another northern group 
distinguished by its thick leaves usually broad at the base with long 
slender stems, large flowers and large fruit often broader than high, 
frequently angled, green or red covered with a pale bloom, surmounted 
by a prominent calyx raised on a tube, and hard dry flesh. Many of 
the species are handsome in spring and autumn and the type of the 
group, C. pruinosa, especially deserves the attention of planters. It 
is a small tree which grows naturally from southern Vermont to Mis- 
souri and along the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains. It has 
thick, blue-green leaves; the flowers are sometimes an inch in diame- 
ter and conspicuous from the twenty large, deep, rose-colored anthers, 
and the fruit, which is arranged in broad drooping clusters, is subglob- 
ose, rather more than half an inch in diameter, apple green until late 
in autumn, when it becomes dark purple red and very lustrous. 
Dwarf Hawthorns. From the middle to the end of October there is 
not a more interesting group of small shrubs in the Arboretum than that 
of the species of Crataegus in the Intricatae Group which is arranged 
on the lower side of the road at the eastern base of Peter’s Hill next 
to the Crabapple Collection. These shrubs are confined to the northern 
United States and Canada, and are perhaps more numerous in Penn- 
sylvania and Michigan than in other parts of the country. They bloom 
later than most of the American Hawthorns, the flowers of all of them 
are large and conspicuous with yellow, rose-colored or pink anthers. 
The fruit ripens late and is scarlet, red, orange, yellow or russet, and 
its beauty is increased by the brilliant colors of the leaves at the time 
it ripens. A large number of these plants are now in the collection. 
One of the handsomest this year is C. cuprea with scarlet foliage and 
russet or copper-colored fruit. This little shrub was first detected in 
a vacant lot in the city of Wilmington, Delaware, and is not known 
to grow naturally beyond the limits of that city. C. Delossii, found 
growing several years ago by the side of a road near Toronto, is un- 
usually full of its orange and red fruit this autumn. This species dif- 
fers from the others of the group in the large number of fruits (ten 
to fifteen) compactly arranged in dense clusters. The autumn leaves 
are green and yellow. Other species of this group deserving attention 
are C. infera from the neighborhood of Sellersville, Bucks County, 
Pennsylvania, with orange-red fruit and brilliant orange and red autumn 
leaves; C. fructuosa, a shrub five or six feet talKwhich has only been 
found on the Serpentine Ridge near West Chester, Pennsylvania, with 
deep orange-red fruit in small erect clusters, and dark red-purple 
autumn leaves; and C. modesta, a little shrub often not more than 
