WORTHY OF GENERAL CULTURE. 
*3 
\ eitch’s Silver Firs ; Douglas Fir ; Retinospora obtusa, and its dwarf and drooping varieties, R. pisifera, R. plumosa 
a urea, and R. filifera pendula ; Cuspidata, Upright, and Golden Yews ; Japanese, Drooping oblong-leaved, Douglas, 
Golden, and Waukegan Trailing Junipers ; Japanese Podocarpus, Cephalotaxus drupacea; Rhododendrons, and 
Azalea amaena. 
bine flowering shrubs open the year (from December till March, according to weather), in winter with the yellow 
Jessamine (J. nudiflorum), and pass towards spring with Japanese Witch Hazel, Mezereon, Fragrant Rush Honeysuckle, 
borsythias, Corylopsis, and Japan Quinces. May enters with many Spiraeas, Hall’s Yulan, and other Magnolias, and 
towards the end of the month. Lilacs, Deutzias, Snowballs, Azaleas, Broom, and Hawthorns appear in their loveliest 
profusion. June comes in with these, and includes Rhododendrons, Japanese Styrax, Mock Orange, Japan Lilac, Ben- 
thamias, and Privet. July is ushered in with Stuartias, Kolreuteria, Golden Hypericum, Yucca, Dwarf Horse-Chestnut, 
Catalpa, and 1 rumpet Vine. With August, in come Chinese Tamarix, Althaeas, Clethra, Panicled Hydrangeas, and 
Sorrel 1 ree. In September we have the Chaste Shrub, Desmodium penduliflorum, and the Mandschurian Aralias ; and 
in October the evergreen Osmanthus salicifolius. 
1 he most esteemed among berry-bearing shrubs is Elseagnus longipes. It is a handsome, shapely,'silvery-leaved 
shrub, perfectly hardy and easy to grow ; it blooms in May and ripens a heavy crop of highly ornamental fruit in July, and 
this fruit is not only edible but is made into a most delicious sauce. And insect vermin never attack the shrub or its 
fruit. Berberis 1 hunbergii, Euonymus latifolius, Ilex verticellata, Rosa rugosa, Viburnum dilatatum, and Callicarpa 
purpurea are also especially appreciated for their crops of showy fruit. 
Much use is made of Hardy Perennials, and they are grown for garden decoration as well as for cut flowers, and the 
more prominent kinds are in masses by themselves. There are belts of snowy Arabis and Moss Pink in April and May, 
shrubby and herbaceous Pseonias of every shade of white, pink, and crimson, brilliant Oriental Poppies, German Irises 
of most every hue, golden Coreopsis, Bell-flowers, and many others in May and June. The magnificent Delphiniums 
are largely grown, and hundreds of plants of Japanese Irises in one group afford a gorgeous display about the fourth 
of July. Many kinds of Lilies, Yucca, Everlasting Pea, and Decussata Phlox are in their prime in July; other Lilies, 
herbaceous Clematises, Autumn Phloxes, and White Day Lily, brighten up the month of August, and Pyrethrum 
uliginosum, the indispensable Japanese Anemones, perennial Asters, and Mist Flower help the display in September 
and into October. 
___ WM. FALCONER. 
Some Attractive Books. 
The Trees of Northeastern America, by Charles S. Newham., is a recently published work of no small value. 
In it every tree native to Canada and the Northern United States east of the Mississippi River is carefully described and 
classified under its botanical and popular name, with brief details of its characteristics and habitat, and remarks concern¬ 
ing its commercial utility. Of each kind of tree an outline drawing, often full-size, of a leaf is reproduced, and thus the 
merest amateur in botanical matters is able at once to fix and identify any specimen. The volume is a beautiful specimen 
of book-making in every respect, and the illustrations from leaves and fruit are all from original drawings, and are very 
numerous. Price $2.50, post-paid. 
The Leaf-Collector’s Handbook and Herbarium. By Charles S. Newham. , author of “ Trees of North¬ 
eastern America.” By the aid of this volume the characteristic leaves of the trees can be classified and preserved, the 
illustrations and directions making it an easy task. There can be no better companion for a summer or fall ramble in the 
country or through the woods, and the painstaking collector can make his book not only a source of pleasure, but an 
artistic souvenir of holiday jaunts. Uniform with the above, price $2.00, post-paid. 
The Garden as Considered in Literature by Certain Polite Writers. Edited, with a critical essay, bv 
Walter Howe. This beautiful little volume, in the “ Knickerbocker Nuggets ” contains essays by noted authors of 
ancient and modern times on the pleasures and attractions of the garden and gardening as a pastime, and these essays 
form a charming contribution to the store of garden lore. Price $1.00, post-paid. 
Among the Moths and Butterflies, by JTlia P. Ballard, is a recent publication which cannot fail to interest 
young and old in the insect life about them ; and the instances related are, as they should be, a part of the history of 
American insects, illustrated by many original and well executed drawings. Price ^1.50 post-paid. 
Landscape Gardening. Messrs. Putnam have just issued a second edition of their volume on this fascinating 
subject, by Samuel Parsons, Jr., for many years Superintendent of Parks, New York City. The author has gained an 
enviable reputation as an authority upon the art of landscape gardening, and the present volume is the result of his actual 
experience. He has devoted chapters to the Lawn, Sloping Grounds, Grandmother's Garden, Bedding Plants, Lawn 
Planting, Spring, Summer, and Autumn Effects on the Lawn, etc., etc. The work is beautifully printed in octavo form, 
and contains nearly 200 illustrations. The book is an invaluable one to every actual or prospective owner of a country 
place. Price, $3.50, post-paid. 
The above books can be obtained from the Publishers, G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 27 & 29 W. 23d St., New York, or 
from the B. A. Elliott Co., Pittsburgh, Pa. 
